Calculate linear feet of trailer space needed for pallet shipments. Estimate floor loading requirements and trailer utilization for LTL freight.
Floor loading measures how much linear footage of trailer floor space a shipment occupies. LTL carriers increasingly use linear feet-based pricing, charging by the amount of trailer floor a shipment requires rather than by weight or freight class alone. This approach more accurately reflects the carrier's actual capacity utilization.
A standard 53-foot trailer has approximately 50 linear feet of usable floor space. Standard pallets (48×40 inches) placed two-across (widthwise) in the trailer occupy 4 linear feet per row. Understanding your linear footage requirements helps you accurately estimate LTL charges under linear-foot pricing programs.
This calculator determines how many linear feet your pallet shipment requires and what percentage of a trailer it uses.
Supply-chain managers, warehouse operators, and shipping coordinators rely on precise floor loading data to maintain efficiency and control costs across complex distribution networks. Revisit this calculator whenever conditions change to keep your logistics plans aligned with real-world performance.
Many LTL carriers have shifted to linear foot-based pricing rules that override standard class-based rates when shipments exceed density or linear-foot thresholds. Understanding your floor loading requirements helps you avoid cubic capacity overcharges and plan shipments more efficiently. Real-time recalculation lets you model different scenarios quickly, ensuring your logistics decisions are backed by accurate, up-to-date numbers.
Pallets per Row = FLOOR(Trailer Width / Pallet Width) Rows Needed = CEIL(Total Pallets / Pallets per Row) Linear Feet = Rows × (Pallet Length / 12) Trailer Utilization = Linear Feet / Trailer Length × 100
Result: Linear Feet = 20 ft (40% of trailer)
Pallets per row = FLOOR(102/40) = 2. Rows = CEIL(10/2) = 5. Linear feet = 5 × (48/12) = 20 ft. Trailer utilization = 20/53 = 37.7%.
LTL carriers developed linear foot rules to fairly price shipments that take up disproportionate trailer space. A lightweight, bulky shipment that occupies 12 linear feet but weighs only 500 lbs prevents the carrier from loading other freight in that space. Linear foot pricing ensures that shippers pay for the space their freight actually occupies.
The most effective floor loading strategies include consistent pallet sizes (preferably 48×40), double-stacking when possible, eliminating pallet overhang, and consolidating small shipments. Track your average linear feet per shipment and work to reduce it through packaging and loading optimization.
Carriers typically trigger linear foot pricing when one or more thresholds are exceeded: total cubic feet (usually 750+), linear feet (10-12+), or pallet count (6+). Understanding these triggers helps you size shipments to stay below thresholds or consolidate enough to justify the floor space pricing.
Linear foot pricing charges based on the linear feet of trailer floor that a shipment occupies rather than traditional weight/class pricing. Carriers apply this rule when shipments exceed certain thresholds (typically 750+ cubic feet, 6+ pallets, or 10+ linear feet).
A 53-foot trailer fits approximately 26-30 standard pallets (48×40 inches) on the floor, loaded two-across. With double-stacking, capacity increases to 52-60 pallets. The exact number depends on pallet orientation and trailer door access requirements.
Most LTL carriers apply cubic capacity or linear foot pricing rules when a shipment exceeds 10-12 linear feet, 750 cubic feet, or 6 pallets. The exact threshold varies by carrier. Staying below these thresholds keeps you on standard class-based pricing.
Double-stacking is possible when the bottom pallet can support the top pallet's weight and both pallets combined don't exceed the trailer height (~108 inches). Products must be stackable, and carriers may have restrictions.
For standard 48×40 pallets, placing the 40-inch side along the trailer width (102 inches) allows two pallets side by side. This is the most efficient orientation, using 4 linear feet per row of two pallets.
Shipments that use more than their "fair share" of floor space relative to weight get penalized through linear foot pricing. If your freight is light and bulky (taking up lots of floor space), linear foot pricing can be 20-50% higher than standard rates.