Freight Operations / Shipment size

Full Truckload in trucking

Short answer: A shipment that uses a full trailer or is priced as a full trailer move.

Plain-English explanation

Full Truckload means a shipment that uses a full trailer or is priced as a full trailer move. In day-to-day trucking, the word matters most when it changes an instruction, document, cost, appointment, or equipment choice.

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

Full Truckload can affect rate negotiation, appointment timing, accessorial pay, paperwork acceptance, or who is responsible for a delay. The useful question is simple: what does this word change on this load?

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

Full Truckload helps decide whether the freight needs a full trailer, shares space with other freight, or requires a pricing model different from a normal truckload.

Common mistakes or confusion

  • Using full truckload loosely when the load file needs a specific party, appointment, document, charge, or equipment detail.
  • Assuming a short dispatch note is enough when the final instruction should be confirmed in the written load record.
  • Mixing it up with Less Than Truckload, which can change paperwork, payment, dispatch expectations, or review steps.

Related terms

Commonly confused with

Related guides

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Sources and last updated

Last updated: 2026-05-07