How to Help Carriers With Cash Flow

How to Help Carriers With Cash Flow

How to Help Carriers With Cash Flow. Helping freight carriers (especially small and mid-sized trucking companies) improve cash flow requires addressing their biggest pressure points: slow-paying shippers/brokers, fuel costs, equipment expenses, and unpredictable freight volume. Here are practical ways to help.

Offer Freight Factoring (Fastest Impact)

TAFS | RTS Financial | Apex Capital

What it does:
Factoring companies pay carriers 80–95% of their invoice immediately, instead of waiting 30–60+ days.

How it helps cash flow:

  • Immediate working capital
  • Covers fuel, payroll, maintenance
  • Reduces need for high-interest loans

Best for: Small fleets (1–20 trucks) and owner-operators.

2. Quick Pay Programs (Broker Side)

If you’re a broker or 3PL, offer:

  • 2–7 day quick pay
  • Discounted early payment (e.g., 2–3%)

This builds loyalty and keeps carriers prioritizing your freight.

3. Fuel Cards & Fuel Discount

Comdata | WEX | EFS

Fuel is often 25–35% of operating costs.

Helping with fuel cards:

  • Per-gallon discounts
  • Credit terms
  • Weekly billing instead of daily cash outflow

This smooths weekly cash requirements.

4. Structured Rate Negotiation

Encourage carriers to:

  • Know cost per mile (CPM)
  • Avoid low-margin freight
  • Add fuel surcharges
  • Negotiate detention pay

Better margins = healthier cash flow.

5. Equipment Financing Restructure

If a carrier is tight on cash:

  • Refinance trucks
  • Extend loan terms
  • Convert balloon payments
  • Explore lease-to-own options

Lower monthly payments reduce pressure.

Tools that help:

  • Load boards
  • Route optimization software
  • Backhaul planning

Reducing empty miles directly increases revenue per mile.

How to Help Carriers With Cash Flow