Navigating Diesel Fuel Price Volatility

Bruce Sayer Last Modified : Jan 28, 2026

Fuel is one of the most significant and unpredictable operating expenses in the trucking industry. When prices surge, margins evaporate. When diesel fuel prices stabilize, fleet owners can plan more confidently and control costs more effectively, but rarely for long, as fuel volatility is a constant threat. For trucking companies already navigating thin margins, these fluctuations can make the difference between profit and loss.

Staying profitable in this environment requires more than watching the pump price. It demands strategic planning, the right mix of tools to offset volatility, and efficient cash flow management to ensure operating funds are available.

Financial stability and efficient cash flow management are essential to every successful trucking business. This article is part of a guide designed to provide fleet owners and managers with actionable financial strategies to enhance operational reliability and profitability.

About the guide:

A Trucker’s Guide to Cash Flow Management is a strategy blueprint and best-practice resource designed to help fleet owners and managers optimize working capital, control costs, and build financially resilient operations that keep trucks moving and business profitable.

This article explores the challenges of fuel cost volatility, strategies to manage and mitigate risk, and financing solutions that maintain steady cash flow even when fuel prices spike.

The Challenges: How Fuel Volatility Impacts Trucking

Few pressures hit trucking companies as hard, or as unpredictably, as fuel volatility. The following challenges reveal their impact on day-to-day operations and profitability:

Tight Margins Become Tighter: Fuel can represent 20% to 40% of total operating costs for many fleets. When diesel prices climb rapidly, trucking companies often struggle to adjust rates fast enough to maintain profitability.

Unpredictable Expense Planning: Diesel fuel price swings make it difficult to forecast expenses, set budgets, or commit to long-term pricing for customers. This creates pressure on cash flow, cash reserve planning, and long-term investment decisions.

Delayed Customer Payments Widen Cash Flow Gaps: Companies may wait 30 to 90 days to get paid while having to absorb fuel costs immediately. This mismatch between paying for fuel today and receiving customer payments months later strains cash flow.

Competition Pressures Pricing: When fuel costs rise, some fleets lower rates to keep freight bills competitive and trucks moving. To avoid eroding profitability, others pass fuel increases onto customers, but risk losing lanes to competitors in the process.

Operational Inefficiency Becomes More Costly: Poor routing, idling, and underutilized equipment all become more expensive when the cost per gallon rises. Fuel volatility magnifies the impact of inefficiencies.

Implement a strong fuel surcharge program

Together, these challenges make fuel volatility one of the most disruptive forces in trucking, underscoring the need for strategies to manage and reduce fuel cost pressure.

Strategies to Manage and Reduce Fuel Cost Pressure

Trucking companies cannot control diesel fuel prices, but they can control how well they are prepared. Well-managed, profitable fleets focus on operational discipline, pricing mechanisms, back-office efficiencies, and technology investments to minimize the impact of fuel volatility.

Operational discipline

  • Optimize routing and reduce idle time by utilizing telematics, GPS routing tools, and idle-reduction policies. Even small reductions in wasted miles or idling hours significantly reduce fuel consumption.
  • Improve driver behavior and efficiency through training programs that promote fuel-efficient driving. Steady acceleration, proper shifting, and speed control can reduce fuel consumption by 5% to 15%.
  • Invest in newer, more efficient equipment to perform with better MPG.

Implement a strong fuel surcharge program

Fuel surcharges are a critical pricing mechanism that enable trucking companies to remain profitable despite volatile fuel prices. Most shippers recognize that a transparent, index-based fuel surcharge is a fair and practical way to maintain rate stability and share risk when diesel fuel prices spike.
However, surcharge programs do not provide full insurance against risk:

  • In a soft market, smaller carriers often accept lower rates or weaker surcharge programs to keep freight moving, placing additional pressure on an already competitive landscape.
  • Surcharges do not fully protect carriers when negotiating power shifts to shippers.
  • Fuel surcharges don’t cover empty miles or inefficiency.
  • Fuel is an immediate expense, yet fuel surcharges are usually collected when invoices are paid, typically 30–90 days later. This creates a cash flow gap.

When positioned as a cost-recovery mechanism, not a profit tool, and communicated upfront, they tend to preserve trust while protecting carrier margins. Ultimately, fuel surcharges help profitability, but they cannot replace the need for strong financial planning and reliable cash flow to support uninterrupted operations.

Back office efficiency

  • Budget forecasting and scenario planning: Use fleet management software or a fuel calculator to regularly model best-, mid-, and worst-case fuel scenarios to anticipate impacts on profit margins, pricing strategies, and operational adjustments.

Evaluating fuel expense by dollars spent provides little value for this analysis, as it does not account for fluctuations in miles driven. Instead, track fuel costs as a percentage of revenue. This method provides more insightful metrics, allowing you to gauge whether fuel costs are increasing or decreasing at the same rate as earned income.

  • Monitor cost-per-mile and fuel spend in real time: Track cost-per-mile to help identify when fuel costs are eroding margins. Combining telematics data with financial dashboards ensures decisions are based on real numbers, not estimates.
  • Improve Back-Office Efficiency: Automating invoicing and collections can reduce administrative burden and accelerate processing, enabling faster payments and ensuring available working capital when fuel costs are due.

Investments in technology

Technology plays a key role in reducing fuel costs by improving visibility and control across the operation.

  • Fuel management software helps carriers track purchases, monitor MPG by truck and driver, flag waste or fraud, and optimize where and when fuel is bought.
  • Fuel-efficient trucks and aerodynamic upgrades, such as fairings, reduce drag and improve mileage, while telematics and ELD data highlight idling, routing inefficiencies, and driving habits that unnecessarily burn fuel.

Financing solutions and tools – reliable working capital and savings

Operational discipline and fuel surcharges help fleets control costs, reduce fuel waste, and maximize the efficiency of every mile driven. However, this is only half of the formula for controlling fuel expenses and boosting profitability. Ensuring funds are available to pay for fuel when it’s needed is essential.

Leveraging financial solutions and tools to strengthen cash flow and provide reliable working capital is a decisive strategic advantage.

  • Fuel cards: For many fleets, fuel cards represent the easiest and fastest way to offset volatility. Lock in substantial savings through price-per-gallon discounts, national network coverage, fraud prevention controls, and reporting tools to track usage and eliminate waste.
  • Freight Factoring: Best for fleets of all sizes, especially those waiting 30 to 90 days for payment. Factoring provides immediate cash by advancing up to 100% of invoices, often in hours. This keeps trucks fueled and drivers paid, regardless of market volatility.

Freight factoring is one of the most reliable ways to prevent rising fuel costs from depleting the company’s liquidity position.

  • Asset-based lending (ABL): Trucking companies are asset-rich with valuable accounts receivable and working equipment. ABL supports trucking companies by unlocking working capital tied up in these assets, giving operators the liquidity needed to invest in technology without disrupting day-to-day operations. Drawing on an ABL revolving line of credit, carriers can invest in telematics, fuel management software, maintenance systems, and safety technology that improve efficiency and reduce costs.

Conclusion

Fuel cost unpredictability is not going away. Trucking companies that combine operational discipline with innovative financial management are better equipped to withstand fuel volatility and often outperform competitors in both stable and unstable markets.

A strong fuel management strategy includes:

  • Proactive cost control (routing, idle reduction, driver behavior)
  • Smart procurement (fuel surcharges, fuel cards)
  • Reliable liquidity (fuel cards, factoring, ABL)

Fleets that consistently invest in operational efficiency, tools, and financial agility outperform competitors, especially in volatile environments.

Contact us to discover how eCapital can best position your trucking company to withstand fuel price volatility to outperform competitors and improve profitability.

Next in the series

Managing Payroll and Driver Costs: Investing in Operational Stability

  • Keeping professional, careful, and loyal drivers behind the wheel is critical.
  • /blog/maximizing-trucking-company-profit-margins/For most trucking companies, payroll isn’t just an expense – it’s an investment in the stability of the entire operation and a driving force behind growth.
  • As trucking companies grow, payroll shifts from a manageable, variable expense into one of the most significant and inflexible financial obligations, requiring consistent cash outflows regardless of load volume, payment timing, or market conditions.
  • In an industry where payment delays are common, disciplined cash flow management ensures that the people moving your freight are never the ones waiting to get paid.

View the complete Table of Contents.

Key Takeaways

  • For trucking companies already navigating thin margins, diesel fuel price volatility can make the difference between profit and loss.
  • Staying profitable demands strategic planning, the right mix of tools to offset volatility, and efficient cash flow management to stabilize financial structures and support uninterrupted operations.
  • Fleets that consistently invest in operational efficiency, tools, and financial agility outperform competitors, especially in volatile environments.
ABOUT eCapital

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About the writer
Bruce Sayer Headshot
Bruce Sayer

Bruce is a seasoned content creator with more than 40 years of experience across a wide range of industries. His career has spanned multiple sectors, from aerospace and transportation to new home construction and industrial products. He has held contract, staff, and managerial roles, supporting the growth of organizations ranging from owner-operator businesses to mid-market corporations.

Through this firsthand exposure, Bruce has developed a deep, practical understanding of the operational challenges, organizational structures, and financial approaches that can either hinder or accelerate business growth.

Since 2013, Bruce has been a dedicated member of the eCapital team, publishing informative, insight-driven articles designed to introduce and guide business leaders through effective financing options. During this time, his work has influenced countless CEOs and senior executives to evaluate, and often implement, specialized funding strategies that support stable, flexible financial structures.

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