Ask around any yard in March and you'll hear the same story shape: the trucks that made it weren't lucky — they repriced in November while everyone else was matching September numbers into a January cost structure.
Every year, between Thanksgiving and Valentine's Day, the trucking industry quietly holds a funeral season. Rates dip, weather bites, holiday payment delays stack on top of normal broker terms — and analysts have counted thousands of authorities going dark in single winter months. The industry calls it the capacity purge. The carriers who survive it call it something else: Tuesday. Because they planned for it in October.
The winter killers are cash-flow killers: slower freight, higher costs, holiday payment delays stacking on top of normal broker terms. The defense is built in October — a fatter reserve, a hard look at which brokers pay slowly enough to hurt in January, and a floor recalculated for winter fuel and idle costs.
Winter miles cost more — fuel burn, weather delays, holiday timing premiums. A rate that worked in September donates money in December. Recalculate; then hold. Capacity is leaving the market around you, which quietly strengthens every floor you defend.
Fewer active trucks means brokers lean harder on the reliable ones. Carriers who stayed disciplined through the purge routinely find February and March kinder than the carriers who slashed rates in December ever will.
Winter isn’t a vibe; it’s a different cost structure wearing the same lane.
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.