U.S. manufacturing activity returned to expansion in May 2026 for the first sustained run since 2022, and the freight market is feeling it in the lanes that matter most for small carriers. Contract rates are up roughly 8% since last fall, spot tender rejections are holding above 7%, and the FreightWaves State of the Industry report just confirmed that the long-running great freight recession finally appears to be ending. For small carriers running flatbed, dry van, intermodal-adjacent dray, and regional LTL, the door is open to lock in better lanes and stronger customer commitments before the rest of the market notices the cycle has turned.
The signals come from multiple data sources. The FreightWaves May 2026 State of the Industry report in affiliation with Ryder lays out the case that capacity has stayed constrained while volumes have firmed. Tender rejection rates are elevated, contract rates are climbing, and U.S. manufacturing activity has returned to expansion supporting flatbed, rail, and LTL demand. Retail and consumer spending are holding up even as inflation pressures sentiment. The combination matters because flatbed and LTL lanes are the carriers that most clearly benefit from manufacturing recovery, not consumer goods recovery.

What Manufacturing Expansion Means For Freight Mix
Consumer freight runs on dry van. Industrial freight runs on flatbed, step deck, LTL, and rail intermodal. When the ISM Manufacturing PMI ticks above 50, factories are increasing output of steel, aluminum, machined parts, building products, and heavy industrial finished goods. Every additional truckload of beams or HVAC equipment or rolled steel coil is a flatbed move. Every additional shipment of MRO parts or finished industrial subassemblies is an LTL move. Every additional container of imported industrial inputs from Mexico or Asia hits a port and turns into rail intermodal or drayage.
The flatbed market has already been quietly running hotter than the dry van market. Flatbed spot rates have posted 15 consecutive weeks of gains as data center construction, transmission line builds, and reshored manufacturing all draw on the same flatbed capacity pool. Adding broad-based manufacturing recovery on top means flatbed should be the strongest lane for small carriers through summer 2026. Carriers that have a step deck or RGN trailer parked because they wrote off the lane in 2024 should get that asset back in service now.
Contract Rates Climbing 8 Percent Sets The Bid Window
The 8% contract rate increase since fall 2025 is roughly the rate of improvement most shippers expected to see by mid-2027 under prior forecasts. The cycle is moving faster than expected, and the implication for small carriers is that the spring and summer bid cycles in 2026 are unusually generous. Shippers that bid out lanes in March and April this year already locked in rates that reflect the new market reality. Shippers that have not yet rebid will likely face higher cover rates and tighter award constraints. Small carriers should be aggressively pursuing direct shipper relationships right now, especially in flatbed and regional LTL lanes where the manufacturing cycle is creating the most demand.
The other piece of the contract picture is that tender rejection rates above 7% mean shippers are not getting their primary award carriers to cover loads at contract rate. That gap is where small carriers can step in with shipper of choice strategies. A small carrier with a 5-truck fleet running a single dedicated lane out of a Midwest manufacturing plant to a Mexico cross-border yard can build a $1.5M to $2M annual book of business by being the reliable backup when the primary carrier covers 92% of tenders and the shipper desperately needs the other 8% covered without going to spot. Brokerage rates on those spot covers run 25-40% above contract, so the dynamic favors carriers who can run direct.
Truck Tonnage Confirms The Tonnage Recovery
The macro data supports the story too. The ATA Truck Tonnage Index slipped 0.3% in April 2026 but posted the first year-over-year gain since 2020. That YoY pivot is the kind of data point shippers and carriers use to reset multi-year contracts. JB Hunt’s record Q1 2026 intermodal volume and the lifted Cummins full-year outlook in the same week told the same story from the inside of the largest carriers. Small carriers reading those earnings reports as one-off press releases are missing the cumulative signal. The freight cycle has turned, and the carriers who load their operations for the upturn will outperform the ones still operating like the 2024 recession is the new normal.
Distribution Center Tightening Reinforces The Cycle
Manufacturing recovery does not happen in isolation. It feeds into distribution center activity, which feeds into trucking demand. Industrial warehouse vacancy stabilized at 6.7% in Q1 2026 with big-box leasing tripling, which means shippers are absorbing space at a faster clip than at any point since 2022. That absorption is led by 3PLs, food and beverage, and industrial manufacturers, all of which generate steady multi-stop truckload and LTL freight. Small carriers that ran spot freight in 2024-2025 should be looking at DC tenant lists in their home markets and pitching their fleet directly to shippers who just signed a 5-year warehouse lease and will need dedicated trucking capacity by Q3.
Where The LTL Opportunity Sits
Most small truckload carriers do not consider LTL because they think it requires expensive cross-dock infrastructure and a route network. That is true for national LTL. But regional and metro LTL plays differently. A 5-truck carrier with a single terminal in a manufacturing region like greater Cleveland or the Greenville-Spartanburg corridor can capture local pickup and delivery work for national LTL carriers desperate for capacity in their home markets. Yellow’s bankruptcy in 2023 permanently removed roughly 9% of LTL capacity. Most of that has been replaced by Estes, Old Dominion, and ABF, but the cargo throughput growth of 2026 is putting pressure on terminals again. Small carriers running dedicated P&D for a single LTL national can pull $1,800 to $2,400 per truck per day, which is on par with strong dry van work and far steadier.
The Rail Intermodal Read
JB Hunt’s record Q1 2026 intermodal volume is a clear sign rail capacity is doing well. For small carriers, that opens drayage opportunity at every Class I rail ramp in the country. Manufacturing recovery means more containers coming in through Long Beach, Charleston, Houston, and Savannah for domestic distribution. Containers that previously moved on dry van OTR are now back on rail and need short-haul truck moves at both ends. Small carriers with 3 to 5 trucks in any major ramp market can cover 8-15 container moves a day for $200 to $400 per move depending on length. That is $1,600-$6,000 per truck per day in revenue with zero shipper hunting.
What Small Carriers Should Do This Week
First, pull your current customer list and segment by manufacturing, industrial, retail, and consumer. If your book is 80% retail, you are running into a slower segment. If your book is 80% manufacturing, you are running with a 2026 tailwind. Carriers should aim to be at least 50% manufacturing or industrial across the year. Second, identify three to five named manufacturing shippers in your operating region you do not currently work with. Pull their NAICS codes, their plant locations, and their typical freight lanes. Pitch them directly with a one-page capacity offer and a per-mile or per-shipment rate that reflects current contract market conditions. Third, run the math on adding a step deck or flatbed trailer if you only run dry van. Flatbed rates have been climbing for 15 weeks straight and manufacturing expansion will keep that going. A used step deck is $25,000 to $35,000 and can pay for itself in 8-12 months at current spot rates.
Bottom Line On The Manufacturing Pivot
Manufacturing expansion is the single biggest tailwind small carriers have not yet fully priced into their 2026 operating plan. Contract rates up 8%, tender rejections holding firm, distribution center vacancy stabilizing, flatbed and rail intermodal volume strong, and consumer spending hanging in despite higher rates. The freight market that small carriers should be running into is fundamentally different from the one they survived in 2024 and early 2025. Carriers that move now, lock in customers, add capacity in flatbed and LTL adjacent work, and bid directly to industrial shippers will compound advantages through Q3 and Q4. Carriers that wait to see whether the cycle holds will end up running spot freight at a discount while their competitors run dedicated lanes at a premium.

Innovative Logistics Group
Industry Commentary
May 27, 2026
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