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Equipment Specs Guide

Conestoga Trailer Dimensions: Sizes, Weight & Cargo Specs

Knowing the exact dimensions of a Conestoga trailer is critical for quoting loads, avoiding overweight violations, and ensuring your freight fits under the tarp bows. This guide covers every dimensional specification across all three Conestoga configurations — flatbed, step-deck, and double-drop — including usable cargo space, tarp system dimensions, and weight calculations.

48-53 ft

Standard Length

102 in

Standard Width

96-114 in

Interior Height Range

2,000-2,800 lbs

Tarp System Weight

OT

O Trucking Editorial Team

Trucking Industry Experts

Published: February 20, 2026Updated: February 20, 2026

Fact-Checked by O Trucking Dispatch Team

5+ years dispatching flatbed and specialty trailer freight, verifying load dimensions against trailer specs for every shipment

5+ Years Experience80+ Carriers ServedIndustry Data Verified

This article was written by the O Trucking editorial team with 9+ years of combined trucking industry experience. Learn more about us.

Flatbed Conestoga Dimensions

The flatbed Conestoga is the most common configuration. It is built on a standard flatbed platform with the rolling tarp system mounted on top. Here are the key specifications:

SpecificationMeasurementNotes
Overall Length48-53 ft53 ft most common; some states restrict to 48 ft on certain roads
Usable Deck Length46-51 ft1-2 ft lost at headboard for tarp storage when retracted
Width (Exterior)102 in (8.5 ft)Federal maximum; same as standard flatbed
Interior Width (Under Tarp)96-100 inTrack rails reduce usable interior width by 2-6 inches
Deck Height~60 in (5 ft)From ground to deck surface; same as standard flatbed
Interior Height (Under Bows)96-102 in (8-8.5 ft)Clearance from deck surface to bottom of tarp bow arch
Overall Height (Loaded)~13.5 ft maxMust stay under 13'6" federal max height with cargo
Trailer Weight (Empty)14,500-16,000 lbsIncludes tarp system; ~2,000-2,500 lbs heavier than bare flatbed
Max Cargo Payload42,000-44,000 lbsBased on 80,000 lb GVW minus tractor and trailer weight

Interior Width Is Narrower Than Deck Width

The track rails that guide the Conestoga tarp bows are mounted on both sides of the trailer, reducing the usable interior width by 2-6 inches compared to the bare deck width. On a 102-inch wide trailer, the interior cargo width under the tarp is typically 96-100 inches. This matters for wide freight — check that your load fits between the tracks, not just on the deck. Freight that contacts the track rails can damage both the cargo and the tarp mechanism.

Step-Deck Conestoga Dimensions

A step-deck Conestoga uses a step-deck (drop-deck) platform that sits lower to the ground on the main deck. This provides additional interior height clearance for taller freight while keeping the total trailer height within legal limits:

SpecificationUpper DeckLower (Main) Deck
Deck Length10-12 ft37-41 ft
Deck Height (from ground)~60 in~36-42 in
Interior Height (Under Bows)~78-84 in102-114 in
Width102 in102 in
Total Length48-53 ft overall
Trailer Weight (Empty)15,000-17,000 lbs
Max Cargo Payload40,000-42,000 lbs

The step-deck Conestoga shines for freight that is too tall for a flatbed Conestoga but still needs weather protection. The lower main deck provides 102-114 inches of interior clearance — compared to 96-102 inches on a flatbed Conestoga. This extra 6-12 inches of height can be the difference between a load fitting under the tarp bows and needing a different trailer.

Double-Drop Conestoga Dimensions

The double-drop Conestoga is the most specialized and least common configuration. Built on a double-drop (lowboy) platform, it provides the maximum possible interior height clearance:

SpecificationMeasurement
Overall Length48-53 ft
Well Length (Lowest Deck)25-29 ft
Well Deck Height~22-26 in from ground
Interior Height (Well)120-138 in (10-11.5 ft)
Width102 in (8.5 ft)
Trailer Weight (Empty)17,000-20,000 lbs
Max Cargo Payload35,000-40,000 lbs

Double-drop Conestoga trailers are rare and expensive but serve a critical niche: very tall equipment (generators, transformers, large HVAC systems) that needs both the low deck height of a double-drop and weather protection during transit. If your freight requires 10+ feet of interior clearance and weather protection, this is the only trailer option short of custom equipment.

All Three Configurations: Side-by-Side

SpecFlatbedStep-DeckDouble-Drop
Interior Height96-102 in102-114 in120-138 in
Max Payload42,000-44,000 lbs40,000-42,000 lbs35,000-40,000 lbs
Deck Height~60 in~36-42 in (lower)~22-26 in (well)
AvailabilityMost commonModerateRare
Cost (New)$65K-$85K$75K-$95K$90K-$120K+
Best ForGeneral flatbed freightTaller freightVery tall/heavy equipment

How to Calculate Conestoga Payload Capacity

The maximum payload on any truck-trailer combination is determined by the federal gross vehicle weight (GVW) limit of 80,000 lbs. Here is how to calculate your specific Conestoga payload:

Payload Calculation Formula

Max GVW: 80,000 lbs (federal limit)

Minus tractor weight: -18,000 to 22,000 lbs (varies by tractor)

Minus trailer weight (with tarp system): -14,500 to 17,000 lbs

= Maximum cargo payload: 41,000 to 47,500 lbs

Example: A tractor weighing 19,000 lbs pulling a flatbed Conestoga trailer weighing 15,500 lbs has a combined empty weight of 34,500 lbs. Maximum cargo payload = 80,000 - 34,500 = 45,500 lbs. This is a best-case scenario with a lightweight tractor and trailer.

Always Weigh Your Specific Combination

The specs in this guide are typical ranges, not guarantees. Tractor weights vary by manufacturer, engine, sleeper configuration, and fuel level. Trailer weights vary by manufacturer, age, tarp system type, and accessories. The only way to know your exact payload capacity is to weigh your specific tractor-trailer combination empty at a CAT scale. Do this when you first acquire the trailer and any time you make significant equipment changes.

Height Clearance: The Hidden Limitation

The Conestoga tarp bows arch over the cargo area, creating an interior ceiling that limits cargo height. This is a critical dimension that many carriers overlook when quoting loads. Unlike an open flatbed where cargo can extend above the side rails (up to the 13'6" legal height limit), Conestoga cargo must fit under the tarp bows.

Flatbed Conestoga — Interior height of 96-102 inches means cargo cannot exceed approximately 8-8.5 feet tall from the deck surface. Standard palletized freight (typically 6-7 feet tall) fits with room to spare, but stacked pallets or tall machinery may not clear the bows.

Edge clearance is less than center clearance — The tarp bows are arched, meaning the maximum interior height is at the center of the trailer. Near the edges (within 12-18 inches of the track rails), the clearance can be 6-10 inches less. Always measure your cargo height at the widest point, not just the center.

Dunnage adds height — If your freight requires dunnage (wood blocks, airbags, or padding between cargo and deck), factor that into your height calculation. A 4-inch dunnage layer reduces your usable interior height by 4 inches.

Measure Interior Height at Your Specific Trailer

Tarp bow heights vary between manufacturers and can change as the bows age and flex. Measure the interior height of your specific trailer at multiple points — center, left edge, right edge, and both ends — and record these numbers. Use them when quoting loads to ensure your cargo will clear the bows with at least 2 inches of margin. Cargo that contacts the tarp bows during transit will damage both the freight and the tarp system.

Choosing the Right Conestoga Configuration

The right configuration depends entirely on the freight you plan to haul. Here is a simple decision framework:

Flatbed Conestoga (Best for Most Carriers)

Choose this if your freight is standard height (under 8 feet on the deck), you want maximum payload capacity, and you need the widest range of load availability. This is the default choice for most carriers entering the Conestoga market. See our types of Conestoga trailers guide for more detail.

Step-Deck Conestoga (For Taller Freight)

Choose this if you frequently haul freight between 8-9.5 feet tall that needs weather protection. The lower main deck gives you the extra height clearance without exceeding legal height limits. Good for machinery, equipment cabinets, and tall industrial components.

Double-Drop Conestoga (Specialty Only)

Choose this only if you have consistent freight that requires 10+ feet of interior clearance with weather protection. The high cost and limited payload make this impractical unless you have dedicated contracts with shippers who need this exact capability.

How Our Dispatch Team Verifies Dimensions

At O Trucking LLC, we verify freight dimensions against trailer specs before booking every load:

Dimension matching on every load

Before booking a Conestoga load, we confirm the freight dimensions (length, width, height, weight) and verify they fit within the trailer's specifications. We account for tarp bow clearance, track rail width reduction, and dunnage height. If the dimensions are tight, we flag it before the carrier arrives at the shipper.

Weight verification to prevent overweight

We calculate total gross weight for every load using the carrier's actual tractor weight and trailer weight — not estimates. If a load is at risk of exceeding 80,000 lb GVW on a Conestoga, we flag it and recommend a standard flatbed instead.

Need a Dispatcher Who Knows Trailer Specs?

Our dispatchers verify freight dimensions against your specific trailer specs before booking. No surprises at the shipper — your freight fits every time.

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