Long Haul vs Short Haul Trucking: Which Is Right for You?

The biggest decision in trucking isn't which truck to buy — it's how far you want to drive it. Long haul and short haul are fundamentally different businesses with different income models, lifestyle demands, insurance costs, and growth paths. This guide breaks down both options with real numbers so you can choose based on facts, not assumptions.

Semi truck on highway at golden hour

What Counts as Long Haul vs Short Haul?

There's no official line, but the industry generally uses these definitions:

Long Haul (OTR)
Distance: 250+ miles per load
Typical range: 500-2,500+ miles
Time away: 1-3 weeks at a time
Also called: Over-the-road (OTR), line haul
Short Haul (Regional/Local)
Distance: Under 250 miles per load
Typical range: 50-250 miles
Time away: Home daily or weekly
Also called: Regional, local, dedicated

The Numbers at a Glance

$65K-$90K
Long haul company driver pay
$55K-$80K
Short haul company driver pay
120K-150K
Miles/year long haul
50K-80K
Miles/year short haul

Complete Side-by-Side Comparison

Factor Long Haul Short Haul
Annual miles 120,000-150,000 50,000-80,000
Revenue per mile (O/O) $2.00-$3.50 $2.50-$5.00+
Gross revenue (O/O) $240K-$450K $150K-$350K
Fuel cost Higher total, lower per-load Lower total, more stop-and-go
Truck wear High miles, highway wear Lower miles, more braking
Home time Every 2-4 weeks Daily or weekly
Loading/unloading Drop-and-hook common Touch freight more common
Detention risk Moderate (shipper delays) Higher (more stops per day)
Deadhead % 8-15% 5-12%
Insurance cost Higher premiums Lower premiums
Weather exposure All regions, all seasons Regional, predictable
Parking Nightly challenge Usually yard or home

Income Breakdown: Where the Money Actually Goes

Higher gross revenue doesn't always mean higher take-home pay. Here's how the math works for owner-operators:

Long Haul Owner-Operator

Gross revenue$300,000
Fuel (30%)-$90,000
Truck payment-$24,000
Insurance-$18,000
Maintenance-$20,000
Road expenses-$15,000
Permits, IFTA, fees-$8,000
Net before taxes$125,000

Short Haul Owner-Operator

Gross revenue$220,000
Fuel (25%)-$55,000
Truck payment-$24,000
Insurance-$14,000
Maintenance-$12,000
Road expenses-$3,000
Permits, IFTA, fees-$5,000
Net before taxes$107,000
The real comparison: Long haul nets ~$18,000 more per year — but requires being away from home 250+ nights. That's roughly $72 per night away. Many drivers decide the lifestyle trade-off isn't worth the extra income.

How Operating Radius Affects Insurance

Your operating radius is one of the biggest factors in your insurance premium. Here's why:

More Miles = More Exposure

Long haul trucks cover 2-3x the annual miles, which means 2-3x the exposure to accidents. Insurers price this directly into your premium.

Multi-State Complexity

Long haul operations cross dozens of state lines. Different states have different liability thresholds, litigation environments, and permit requirements — all affecting your rate.

Cargo Diversity

Long haul carriers often handle varied cargo types. Short haul operations tend to specialize, which insurers view as lower risk for cargo claims.

Parking and Theft Risk

Long haul drivers park at truck stops nightly, increasing theft and vandalism exposure. Short haul trucks go home to secured yards.

Typical Annual Premium Differences (Owner-Operator, 1 Truck)

Coverage Long Haul Short Haul Difference
Liability ($1M) $9,000-$14,000 $6,000-$10,000 30-40% more
Physical damage $3,000-$5,000 $2,500-$4,000 15-25% more
Cargo $1,500-$3,000 $800-$2,000 40-50% more
Total package $14,000-$22,000 $9,500-$16,000 $4,000-$6,000/yr

Lifestyle: The Factor Nobody Talks About Enough

Most articles compare income and skip the most important difference. Here's an honest look:

Long Haul Lifestyle
  • Home time: Every 2-4 weeks for 2-3 days
  • Meals: Truck stops, fast food, sleeper cooking
  • Exercise: Truck stop workouts, walking laps
  • Relationships: Phone/video calls, planned visits
  • Health: Higher risk — sedentary, irregular sleep
  • Sleep: Sleeper berth, truck stop noise
  • Laundry: Truck stop facilities
  • Personal time: Limited, mostly in sleeper
Short Haul Lifestyle
  • Home time: Daily or every weekend
  • Meals: Home-cooked, meal prep
  • Exercise: Regular gym, home workouts
  • Relationships: Normal family life
  • Health: Lower risk — regular sleep, diet control
  • Sleep: Own bed every night
  • Laundry: At home
  • Personal time: Evenings and weekends
Industry stat: Driver turnover at long haul carriers exceeds 90% annually. At short haul/regional operations, it's typically 30-50%. The lifestyle difference is the #1 reason.

Equipment Differences

The type of operation affects what you need in a truck:

Long Haul Truck

Cab type: Sleeper (70-80" berth)
Engine: 450-600 HP
Fuel tanks: Dual 150-gallon
Comfort: APU, fridge, microwave, inverter
Cost new: $160,000-$200,000+
Cost used: $50,000-$120,000

Short Haul Truck

Cab type: Day cab or small sleeper
Engine: 350-500 HP
Fuel tanks: Single or dual 100-gallon
Comfort: Good seat, A/C, basic amenities
Cost new: $120,000-$160,000
Cost used: $35,000-$80,000

The equipment cost difference ($20,000-$60,000) directly affects your financing, physical damage insurance, and operating costs.

Which Is Right for You?

Neither option is universally better. The right choice depends on your priorities:

Choose Long Haul If...

  • You're young with no family obligations
  • You want to maximize income quickly
  • You enjoy traveling and seeing the country
  • You can handle extended time away from home
  • You're building capital for a future fleet
  • You don't mind truck stop living

Choose Short Haul If...

  • Family and home life are priorities
  • You want a sustainable long-term career
  • You prefer routine and predictability
  • You value your physical health
  • You want lower insurance and equipment costs
  • You're building a local business with repeat customers

The Smart Path: Start Long, Shift Short

Many successful owner-operators use a proven strategy: start with long haul to build capital and experience, then transition to short haul for quality of life.

Years 1-2: Long Haul

Build driving experience, save aggressively, learn the industry. Target $50,000+ in savings.

Year 3: Get Your Authority

Apply for your own operating authority. Start building shipper relationships in your target region.

Year 4: Regional Transition

Shift to regional or dedicated lanes. Accept slightly lower per-mile rates for home time and consistency.

Year 5+: Local/Dedicated

Build a book of local shippers. Your insurance rates improve with shorter radius and claims-free history.

Insurance savings from this transition: Shifting from 48-state long haul to a 200-mile regional radius can reduce your liability premium by 25-40%. Over 5 years, that's $10,000-$25,000 saved.

Beyond the Binary: Specialized Niches

Not every operation fits neatly into long haul or short haul. Some of the best opportunities are in between:

Dedicated Lanes

Same route(s) weekly. Predictable income, home time, and insurance-friendly routes.

Hotshot

Expedited medium-distance loads with smaller equipment. Lower entry cost, flexible scheduling.

Intermodal/Drayage

Port-to-warehouse container moves. Short distance, high frequency, day cab friendly.

Refrigerated Regional

Temperature-controlled loads within a region. Premium rates, specialized equipment.

Flatbed Local

Construction and material deliveries. Home daily, physical work, strong demand.

Tanker Regional

Fuel and chemical deliveries within a region. HazMat endorsement required, premium pay.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I switch from long haul to short haul mid-year?

Yes, but notify your insurance agent immediately. Changing your operating radius is a material change that affects your policy. If you switch without updating your coverage and have a claim, it could be denied. Work with your agent to adjust your policy — you may get a mid-term rate reduction. See our policy guide for details.

Is short haul trucking less dangerous?

Statistically, short haul has fewer fatal accidents per driver (less highway exposure and fatigue), but more fender-benders (urban driving, tight docks, more backing). Your CSA scores may look different — fewer severity points but potentially more frequency points.

Do I need different insurance for long haul vs short haul?

The coverage types are the same (liability, cargo, physical damage), but the rates and radius classifications differ significantly. Your policy must accurately reflect your actual operating radius. Misrepresenting your radius to get lower rates can void your coverage entirely.

Which is better for a first-time owner-operator?

Most advisors recommend starting with a lease or company position to learn the business before going independent. If you're going straight to owner-operator, short haul/regional usually has a lower barrier — less expensive equipment, lower insurance, and the safety net of being home daily.