Freight Operations / Intermodal

Drayage in trucking

Short answer: A short truck move connected to ports, rail ramps, or containers.

Plain-English explanation

Drayage is a short truck move tied to an intermodal container, port, rail ramp, or nearby warehouse. The distance may be short, but appointments, chassis availability, demurrage, and gate rules can make the move complicated.

In a load file, this language usually matters because it changes a rate, appointment, dock instruction, delivery record, or invoice packet.

Why it matters in trucking

Drayage work depends on timing and terminal rules. A missed pickup window, unavailable chassis, or wrong container detail can create delay charges and missed delivery appointments.

The useful details are the ones a dispatcher or billing desk can verify later: who approved the change, when it happened, and which document shows it.

Example in real use

A carrier picks up an import container at a rail ramp, hauls it 38 miles to a consignee for unloading, then returns the empty container to the assigned terminal before the cutoff.

Common mistakes or confusion

  • Assuming a short drayage move is simple because the miles are low.
  • Leaving container, chassis, appointment, or return-location details unchecked.
  • Using drayage and ordinary short-haul truckload as if they have the same gate and equipment requirements.

Related terms

Related guides

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Sources and last updated

Last updated: 2026-05-10