SectorCalc authority guide
How to calculate route cost
How do you calculate delivery route cost?
Route cost sums fuel, driver labor, tolls and vehicle wear for a trip or daily loop. Start with total distance multiplied by cost per kilometer, add stop time at your hourly driver rate, and include deadhead legs that run empty. SectorCalc free route and delivery cost calculators produce quick per-trip estimates; premium logistics route loss analyzer exposes deadhead, fuel drift and margin leak across recurring routes.
Components of route cost
Fuel and driver time dominate most last-mile and regional routes. Maintenance reserve and tolls matter on longer lanes.
- Fuel cost = distance × consumption rate × fuel price
- Labor cost = drive time + stop time at loaded hourly rate
- Deadhead adds cost without matching revenue load
Per-stop versus per-kilometer pricing
Per-km models fit linehaul; per-stop models fit dense urban delivery. Hybrid models allocate a base trip cost plus incremental stop cost.
Why deadhead erodes margin
Empty return legs and repositioning between low-density stops burn fuel and hours without revenue. Track deadhead percentage separately from loaded miles.
Validate quotes with calculators before signing lanes
Use free route cost calculators when bidding new accounts. Escalate to premium route loss analysis when fuel volatility or stop density threatens contracted margin.
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FAQ
- How do you allocate cost per delivery stop?
- Divide total route cost by billable stops after subtracting deadhead-only miles. Add a minimum stop charge when drop density is low.
- Should tolls be included in route cost?
- Yes when they are predictable for the lane. Pass-through toll billing to customers when contracts allow; otherwise include in your cost floor.
- What is route deadhead cost?
- Deadhead cost is expense from running empty or under-loaded legs—fuel, driver hours and tolls without matching freight revenue on that segment.
SectorCalc guides are technical decision-support resources based on standard formulas and transparent assumptions. They are not financial, legal, medical or engineering advice.