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Diesel Just Hit $5. That's Sending Truckers Off The Road

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Nate Gregory
Published Apr 5, 2026
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View from inside a truck cab showing a driver’s hands on the wheel as the vehicle moves down an empty, wet highway—dashboard controls and screens visible, capturing the everyday journey of truckers facing rising diesel prices.
Summary:
  • Diesel prices have jumped 41% since the start of the Iran war to a national average of nearly $5.38 a gallon.
  • Small fleet owners and independent truckers are absorbing the full cost - large carriers have fuel surcharge clauses that adjust automatically.
  • Roughly 450,000 owner-operators haul long-distance freight by the truckload, and many were already struggling before the spike.

Gas prices get the headlines. Diesel is the one that actually moves things.

It costs $5.38 a gallon right now - up 41% since the Iran war started. That's only the second time in history diesel has been this expensive. And the people it's hitting hardest aren't oil companies or airlines. They're the small truckers who carry freight across the country.

The Squeeze on Small Operators

Diesel is the single biggest daily expense in trucking. For large carriers with long-term shipping contracts, the math still works - those deals include fuel surcharge clauses that adjust when diesel climbs.

Small operators don't get that cushion. Rates on the spot market are negotiated "all-in" - no carveout for fuel. So when diesel jumps 41% in a month, small truckers eat the entire cost.

Cash flow makes it worse. Most truckers don't get paid for weeks or months after hauling a load. Big carriers have working capital to float the gap.

Small operators are spending thousands more on fuel today and waiting to collect on jobs they finished last month.

A Market That Was Already Broken

This didn't start with the Iran war. The trucking industry has been in a slow-motion shakeout since late 2022.

During the pandemic, freight rates climbed nearly 40%. Thousands of new operators flooded in - most with fewer than five employees. When consumer demand slowed, the market flipped. Too many truckers chasing too little freight.

Stephen Burks, a former truck driver and economist at the University of Minnesota Morris, estimates roughly 450,000 owner-operators currently haul long-distance freight. Many were barely hanging on before diesel spiked.

What to Watch

The $5 diesel shock could force some truckers to park their rigs for good. That would tighten capacity - which would eventually push shipping rates higher for the operators still standing.

But for now, the pain is concentrated on the smallest players. And everything they haul - food, raw materials, consumer goods - will cost more to move.

That cost doesn't stay in the truck. It gets passed down the line.

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