The failure reports name the same killers every year: thin cash reserves, unknown cost per mile, surprise repairs, mishandled taxes. Notice what's missing: freight. Carriers rarely fail at trucking. They fail at arithmetic.
A composite from the failure files: two trucks, eight months in, revenue every single week — and a shutdown notice in month nine. Not one catastrophic decision. Just loads priced by feel, a repair with no reserve behind it, and a 52-day broker nobody was tracking. The bank ledger below is what that looks like from the inside.
Line up one hundred brand-new authorities in January. By the January after next, industry analyses say ten to fifteen of them are still running. The other eighty-five didn't lose to bad freight, bad luck, or bad driving — they lost to arithmetic they never did. That's the brutal part. Here's the hopeful part: arithmetic is learnable, boring, and completely undefeated.
The failure reports name the same killers every year: not enough cash in reserve, not knowing the true cost per mile, surprise repair bills, and mishandled taxes. Notice what's missing from that list: bad driving, bad luck, bad freight. Carriers rarely fail at trucking. They fail at arithmetic.
Your break-even per mile is the sum of everything it costs to turn the wheels — fuel, insurance, payments, maintenance reserve, driver pay (yes, including your own), fixed overhead spread over your real monthly miles — divided by those miles. National analyses put average all-in operating cost above $2.20 per mile for many operators, while plenty of posted spot freight sits below it. Every load accepted under your break-even is a small donation to someone else's business.
Survivors behave differently in one specific way: they track cost per mile weekly, not annually, and they refuse loads below their floor. Not because they're stubborn — because they know a number the desperate carrier next to them doesn't.
The second killer is timing. A broker paying in 45 days is normal; three of them paying in 45 days during a slow month is a shutdown. The defense is knowing, per broker, how fast they actually pay you — not what the rate con promises — and pricing slow payers accordingly or routing around them.
A composite last month, reconstructed from the failure literature: no reserve line, no payment ledger, no floor. Three boring omissions, one parked truck.
Built inside working truck fleets in the USA — by people who quote loads for a living. RateAnchor is decision support for professional carriers; nothing here is legal, tax, or financial advice.