LTL Freight

The LTL Linear Foot Rule Explained

How carriers price freight by floor space, and what it means for your shipping costs in 2026.

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The Short Answer

The linear foot rule is an LTL pricing mechanism that charges you based on the floor space your freight occupies rather than traditional weight-based freight class. When your shipment exceeds certain thresholds (typically 6-10 linear feet or low density), carriers apply a per-linear-foot rate that often results in significantly higher costs than class-based pricing. Understanding this rule is essential for anyone shipping palletized, bulky, or non-stackable freight.

What Is the Linear Foot Rule?

The linear foot rule is an alternative LTL (Less-Than-Truckload) pricing methodology that replaces traditional freight class-based pricing for certain shipments. Instead of calculating your rate based on NMFC freight class and weight, carriers measure how many linear feet of trailer floor space your cargo occupies and apply a flat rate per linear foot.

A standard dry van trailer is 53 feet long and 8.5 feet wide, providing approximately 450 square feet of floor space. LTL carriers maximize revenue by fitting as many shipments as possible into that space. When your freight takes up disproportionate floor space relative to its weight or revenue, carriers invoke the linear foot rule to ensure they are compensated for the trailer capacity you are consuming.

The rule exists because some freight - while light in weight - occupies significant trailer space. Consider a shipment of empty plastic barrels or foam insulation: these products have low density but take up substantial floor area. Traditional freight class pricing might undercharge for this cargo, so carriers developed the linear foot rule as a corrective mechanism. The practical effect is that shippers of low-density, bulky, or non-stackable freight often face dramatically higher costs when this rule applies.

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How Linear Feet Are Calculated

Calculating linear feet is straightforward in theory but nuanced in practice. The basic formula is: Linear Feet = Length of Freight Footprint (inches) ÷ 12. For a single pallet loaded with the 48-inch side facing the trailer opening, the linear feet calculation is 48 ÷ 12 = 4 linear feet. However, carriers measure the entire footprint your shipment requires, including any unusable space around your freight.

Pallet ConfigurationFootprintLinear Feet
1 pallet (48×40), loaded lengthwise48 inches4 LF
2 pallets (48×40), side by side48 inches4 LF
2 pallets (48×40), inline96 inches8 LF
4 pallets (48×40), 2×2 configuration96 inches8 LF (Threshold!)

Critical nuance: Carriers often round up to the next whole linear foot, and they measure the entire footprint including any overhang or spacing. If your pallet is 50 inches instead of 48 inches, you might be charged for 5 linear feet. If loads cannot be stacked or positioned adjacent to other freight, the carrier may measure the full unusable space as part of your linear foot count.

When the Linear Foot Rule Is Triggered

Carriers do not apply the linear foot rule to every shipment. It typically triggers when your freight meets one or more of these conditions. First, your shipment exceeds a linear foot threshold, commonly set between 6 and 10 linear feet depending on carrier. Second, your freight density falls below a minimum, typically 6-10 pounds per cubic foot (PCF). Third, your cargo is non-stackable or non-forkliftable, preventing carriers from efficiently utilizing vertical space.

Each carrier publishes their specific linear foot rules in their rules tariff document. FedEx Freight, for example, applies their Spot Quote rule on shipments exceeding 10 linear feet with density below 10 PCF. XPO and Old Dominion have similar but slightly different thresholds. Understanding your primary carriers rules is essential for accurate rate forecasting.

Typical Linear Foot Thresholds by Carrier (2026)

  • FedEx Freight: 10+ linear feet with density below 10 PCF
  • XPO Logistics: 8+ linear feet with density below 8 PCF
  • Old Dominion: 10+ linear feet, subject to density floor
  • Estes Express: 8+ linear feet or shipments marked non-stackable
  • SAIA: 12+ linear feet with density minimum requirements

The density component is crucial. Carriers calculate density as: Weight ÷ Cubic Feet. A 1,000 lb shipment on a 4-pallet footprint (approximately 160 cubic feet total volume) has a density of just 6.25 PCF - likely triggering linear foot pricing. Increasing that weight to 1,600 lbs would raise density to 10 PCF and potentially avoid the rule entirely.

Financial Impact: Real-World Cost Comparison

The difference between class-rated and linear foot pricing can be substantial. Consider a real-world example: a shipment of 6 pallets of packaged foam products weighing 1,200 lbs total. Using traditional Class 100 pricing at a negotiated rate of $22 per CWT, the freight charge would be approximately $264. However, if this shipment occupies 12 linear feet and triggers the linear foot rule at $95 per linear foot, the charge becomes $1,140 - a 332% increase.

This dramatic cost difference is precisely why the linear foot rule exists. Low-density freight consumes carrier capacity without generating proportional revenue under class-based pricing. From the carriers perspective, a 12-linear-foot shipment at $264 uses 22% of trailer floor space but contributes only a fraction of what a full truckload would generate. Linear foot pricing corrects this imbalance, ensuring the carrier earns adequate revenue for the space consumed.

For shippers, this creates strong incentives to optimize freight density and configuration. The difference between 5 linear feet and 9 linear feet can mean thousands of dollars on regular shipments. Companies that proactively manage their linear foot exposure gain significant competitive advantage in logistics costs.

Strategies to Minimize Linear Foot Charges

  1. Increase Shipment Density: Add weight without adding floor space. Consolidate multiple orders into fewer, heavier pallets. The goal is to exceed the carriers density threshold (typically 6-10 PCF).
  2. Use Stackable Packaging: Ensure pallets can be double-stacked by using reinforced boxes and load-bearing pallets. Mark freight as stackable when appropriate. Non-stackable designations trigger linear foot pricing even on smaller shipments.
  3. Stay Under Linear Foot Thresholds: If possible, keep shipments under 6 linear feet. This often means shipping 3 pallets instead of 4, or reconfiguring loads to reduce floor footprint.
  4. Negotiate Linear Foot Exemptions: High-volume shippers can negotiate contract terms that exempt their freight from linear foot rules or set higher thresholds. This is a key negotiation point often overlooked.
  5. Split Large Shipments: Sometimes shipping two smaller LTL loads costs less than one large load that triggers linear foot pricing. Run the math before assuming consolidation saves money.
  6. Load Freight Efficiently: Orient pallets to minimize floor footprint. Two 48×40 pallets side by side occupy 4 linear feet; the same pallets placed inline occupy 8 linear feet.

Expert Insight

Pro Tip: The linear foot rule is most punishing for shippers who rarely hit the threshold. If you consistently ship 8-12 linear feet, you should be negotiating dedicated linear foot rates that are competitive with market spot rates. Carriers are often willing to offer volume discounts on linear foot pricing, but only if you ask. Many shippers accept the default tariff rates without realizing they have negotiation leverage.

Additionally, consider whether LTL is the right mode for your freight. Once shipments exceed 8-10 linear feet regularly, partial truckload (PTL) or volume LTL rates often become more economical. Some carriers offer volume LTL programs specifically designed for shipments in the 10-20 linear foot range, providing better rates than standard linear foot pricing without requiring a full trailer commitment.

Industry trends for 2026: Carriers are increasingly using dimensioning technology to automatically measure linear feet at origin terminals. This reduces disputes but also eliminates any benefit from optimistic declarations. Accurate measurement means accurate billing - plan your freight configuration accordingly and verify dimensions before shipping.

Know Your Freight Class and Density

Calculate whether your shipment will trigger linear foot pricing before you get quoted.

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Glossary of Terms

Linear Foot (LF)

One foot of trailer floor space length. Standard trailer is 53 linear feet long.

Density (PCF)

Pounds per cubic foot. Weight divided by total cubic feet of freight volume.

Rules Tariff

Carrier document specifying accessorial charges, minimum charges, and linear foot thresholds.

Non-Stackable

Freight that cannot have other cargo placed on top, often triggering linear foot pricing.

Frequently Asked Questions

The linear foot rule is an LTL carrier pricing method that charges based on the length of trailer floor space your shipment occupies, rather than traditional freight class. Typically triggered when shipments exceed 6-8 linear feet or 750-1000 lbs, it can result in significantly higher costs for low-density freight.
Linear foot rules typically activate when: (1) a shipment exceeds a threshold (usually 6-10 linear feet), (2) density falls below a minimum (typically 6-10 PCF), or (3) cargo cannot be stacked or double-decked. Thresholds vary by carrier and are specified in their rules tariff.
Divide the longest dimension of your freight footprint by 12 to convert inches to feet. For pallets, use the length of the pallet(s) in the direction they will be loaded. A standard 48-inch pallet loaded lengthwise equals 4 linear feet.
Yes. Strategies include: increasing shipment density by consolidating freight, using stackable packaging, staying below carrier thresholds (often 6 linear feet), and negotiating linear foot exemptions into your carrier contract. Some shippers split large shipments to avoid triggering the rule.
Linear foot pricing charges based on floor space length only (length ÷ 12). Cubic capacity pricing charges based on total volume (L × W × H). Linear foot is more common for floor-loaded or non-stackable freight, while cubic capacity applies to high-cube shipments that fill vertical space.

Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only.

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