You already know deadhead miles cost money. But most owner-operators have no idea how much — or that there are five concrete ways to fix it. Let's change that.
Deadhead miles are the miles you drive empty — no freight, no rate, no revenue. You're burning fuel, racking up maintenance, and putting hours on your engine for zero dollars in return.
It happens every time you drop a load and have to reposition to pick up the next one. Drive 180 miles to the shipper after a drop? That's 180 deadhead miles. Bobtail back to your home terminal after a regional run? Deadhead. Position to a load board pickup 90 miles away? Deadhead.
In deadhead miles trucking, the term is universal — every carrier, every load board, every dispatcher knows it. But "knowing" it and understanding what it's actually costing you are two very different things.
The frustrating part is that deadhead is easy to ignore on a load-by-load basis. You get a great rate on a load out of Dallas, you drive 120 miles empty to pick it up, you focus on the loaded pay. The deadhead cost gets lost in the noise. Multiply that by 50 loads a year and it's not noise anymore — it's a line item that could fund your truck payment for two months.
The industry average for deadhead in trucking is 15–35% of total miles driven. For a typical owner-operator running 120,000 miles a year, that's 18,000 to 42,000 empty miles annually.
Here's what that actually costs you, based on real operating numbers:
These numbers use a blended all-in cost of $0.30/mile for deadhead — fuel, engine wear, tires, and opportunity cost of time. That's conservative. If your fuel cost per mile alone is $0.55–$0.70 loaded, your deadhead all-in is in that same range when you account for the fact that you're still depreciating equipment and burning driver hours.
Put it in context: At a net margin of 15%, an owner-operator needs to gross $33,600 in freight revenue to "fund" $5,040 in profit — which is what you're losing at the low end of deadhead. Cutting deadhead from 25% to 15% of your miles is worth the same as landing 12–15 extra loads per year.
There's also the invisible cost that doesn't show up in fuel receipts: fatigue and maintenance cycles. Every deadhead mile is an empty mile that accelerates wear on your truck — brakes, tires, suspension, engine hours — without generating the revenue to offset it. Over time, that imbalance compounds.
Plug in your miles and cost per mile. The calculator runs the numbers in seconds — no sign-up required.
Calculate My Deadhead Cost →Before you can reduce deadhead, you need to know your number. Most owner-operators either skip this entirely or estimate it badly. Here's the formula and what to plug in.
Your cost per mile (CPM) is the total you spend per mile driven, across all expenses — fuel, insurance, truck payment, maintenance, tires, permits, and your own pay. Most owner-operators run between $1.80 and $2.60 per mile all-in.
If you don't know your CPM yet, that's the number you should calculate first — because it's also your breakeven rate per loaded mile. Our cost per mile guide walks through every expense category and has a free calculator built in.
Beyond the dollar cost, track your deadhead percentage — it's the cleaner performance metric:
Use our deadhead miles calculator to run this instantly — enter your deadhead miles, loaded miles, and cost per mile. It shows you total deadhead cost, percentage, and how it's dragging your effective rate per mile.
Deadhead isn't fully avoidable — but it's absolutely reducible. Here are five approaches that work for owner-operators, ranked roughly from easiest to implement to most impactful long-term.
Deadhead miles are the most invisible expense on your operation — which is exactly why they stay high. You can't negotiate them down with a broker. You can't get a fuel surcharge for them. They just happen, quietly, on every run.
But they're also the most controllable variable in your cost structure. A 10-point reduction in your deadhead percentage — from 25% to 15% on 120,000 miles a year — puts $4,000–$7,000 back in your pocket annually without touching a single rate or picking up a single extra load.
The first step is knowing your number. Once you see what deadhead is actually costing you per run, per week, per year, the strategies above stop feeling like "best practices" and start feeling like obvious money to go get.
Start here: Calculate your deadhead cost for your last run. It takes 60 seconds and the number will surprise you.
Enter your miles and get your true effective rate per mile, after deadhead. No account needed.
Open Deadhead Calculator →