Calculator Inputs
The page stays clean and white, while the input grid adapts to 3 columns on large screens, 2 on tablets, and 1 on mobile.
Example Data Table
| Scenario | Miles | Pallets | Weight Per Pallet | Freight Class | Service | Estimated Quote |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regional retail replenishment | 280 | 3 | 420 lb | 70 | Standard | $1,145.60 |
| Warehouse to store with liftgate | 510 | 5 | 550 lb | 85 | Expedited | $2,864.20 |
| Industrial parts shipment | 860 | 8 | 780 lb | 92.5 | Standard | $5,318.35 |
| Fragile custom pallets | 1220 | 4 | 610 lb | 125 | Guaranteed | $5,941.10 |
Formula Used
This calculator uses an advanced quoting model that combines linehaul pricing, shipment geometry, freight class, density, service modifiers, accessorial charges, discounts, insurance, and margin.
| Step | Formula |
|---|---|
| Total Weight | Total Weight = Pallet Count × Weight Per Pallet |
| Per Pallet Volume | Volume per Pallet = (Length × Width × Height) ÷ 1728 |
| Density | Density = Total Weight ÷ Total Cubic Feet |
| Linehaul Base | Linehaul Base = Distance × Base Rate per Mile |
| Adjusted Linehaul | Adjusted Linehaul = Linehaul Base × Weight Factor × Density Factor × Class Factor × Service Factor × Mode Factor × Pallet Factor × Pallet Count Factor |
| Fuel Cost | Fuel Cost = Adjusted Linehaul × Fuel Surcharge % |
| Insurance | Insurance = Declared Value × Insurance Rate % |
| Subtotal | Subtotal = Linehaul + Fuel + Insurance + Accessorials + Handling |
| Net Carrier Cost | Net Carrier Cost = Subtotal − Discount |
| Final Quote | Final Quote = Net Carrier Cost + Margin |
The modifier tables are practical estimation rules. You can edit factors or add carrier-specific logic if your workflow requires stricter tariff alignment.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter shipment distance, pallet count, pallet dimensions, and weight per pallet.
- Select the freight class, service level, pallet type, and rate mode.
- Add common pricing items like fuel surcharge, liftgate, residential, and limited-access fees.
- Enter declared value and insurance rate when cargo protection matters.
- Apply negotiated discount and margin to model buying and selling rates.
- Click Calculate Shipping Rate to show the quote above the form.
- Review the chart, shipment metrics, and line-item breakdown for faster comparison.
- Use CSV export for spreadsheet work and PDF export for sharing or records.
Why These Inputs Matter
- Distance drives the linehaul base.
- Freight class changes carrier risk and handling cost.
- Density helps reflect how efficiently trailer space is used.
- Accessorials often create major quote differences.
- Declared value can materially affect insurance cost.
- Discount and margin let you model both buy rates and sell rates.
FAQs
1) Does this calculator replace a carrier quote?
No. It provides a structured estimate using practical freight pricing logic. Actual carrier quotes can differ because of lane demand, contract rates, embargoes, equipment availability, and seasonal market conditions.
2) Why does freight class affect the result so much?
Freight class reflects handling complexity, stowability, density, and liability. Higher classes usually cost more because they take up space less efficiently or create extra risk for the carrier.
3) What is density in pallet shipping?
Density is shipment weight divided by shipment volume. Denser freight often earns better economics because it uses trailer space more efficiently relative to its weight.
4) When should I add liftgate or residential fees?
Use them when pickup or delivery needs special unloading equipment or occurs at a residence. These charges are common and can significantly change the final quote.
5) Can I use this for partial truckload pricing?
Yes. The rate mode field includes partial truckload and dedicated options. Those choices apply mode multipliers to help reflect different service economics.
6) What does the discount percentage do?
It reduces the modeled carrier subtotal before your margin is added. This is useful when you negotiate rates or want to test contract pricing scenarios.
7) Why include margin in a shipping calculator?
Margin helps brokers, resellers, and internal logistics teams simulate the final selling price. It separates estimated carrier cost from customer-facing quoted price.
8) Can I customize the logic for my business?
Yes. You can replace the modifier tables, connect live APIs, add region-based rules, or store quote histories in a database for more advanced workflows.