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Negotiation Guide

Deadhead Pay Negotiation Guide

You can get paid for deadhead miles — if you know how to ask. Typical rates, scripts, and when it makes sense to negotiate versus when to walk away.

OT

O Trucking Editorial Team

Trucking Industry Experts

Published: February 19, 2026Updated: February 19, 2026

Fact-Checked by O Trucking Dispatch Team

Negotiates deadhead compensation on 30+ loads per week

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

When Carriers Get Paid for Deadhead

Deadhead pay is not guaranteed on every load. It's the exception, not the rule — but it's more common than most carriers realize. Understanding when deadhead compensation is standard helps you know when to push for it.

Remote Pickup Locations (100+ Miles From Freight)

When a shipper is in a rural area far from major freight corridors, brokers expect to pay deadhead. The load won't get covered otherwise. This is your strongest negotiating position.

Broker Needs Specific Carrier or Equipment

Hazmat loads, oversized freight, reefer with specific temp requirements — when the broker needs YOUR truck specifically, you have leverage. They can't just grab the next available carrier.

Dedicated and Contract Lanes

Dedicated contracts almost always account for deadhead in the per-mile rate. If you're committing to a lane long term, deadhead compensation should be part of the deal from day one.

Emergency and Expedited Loads

When a shipper needs a truck NOW and the closest available carrier is 200 miles away, urgency works in your favor. Emergency freight commands premium deadhead rates because time matters more than cost.

Know the Difference

Deadhead pay is standard when the broker needs you to come to them. It's an exception when you're choosing to reposition for a load you found on a load board. The further you are from the pickup and the more specialized your equipment, the stronger your negotiating position.

Typical Deadhead Pay Rates 2026

Distance RangeTypical RateWhen Expected
Under 50 milesUsually not paidConsidered normal repositioning. Rarely negotiated unless combined with other costs.
50-100 miles$1.00-$1.50/milePaid if negotiated upfront. Broker needs your specific equipment or timing.
100-200 miles$1.50-$2.00/mileCommon to receive deadhead pay. Remote pickups or specialized equipment requests.
200+ milesClose to loaded rateNegotiate full or near-full rate. No carrier should deadhead 200+ miles for free.
Dedicated contractsBuilt into per-mile rateDeadhead compensation factored into contract pricing. Negotiate upfront during contract setup.

Rates vary by market conditions, equipment type, and lane. These are 2026 averages based on spot market data and dispatch experience.

Deadhead Negotiation Script (5 Steps)

1

Know Your Costs Before Calling

Before you pick up the phone, calculate your cost per mile. Include fuel, insurance, maintenance, and your time. If you don't know your break-even number, you can't negotiate intelligently. Most owner-operators run $1.50-$1.80 per mile in total costs. Deadhead miles below that number lose you money.

2

Ask About the Pickup Location

When a broker posts a load, ask exactly where the pickup is. Don't assume it's close. Get the full address and calculate the distance from your current location using your GPS or Google Maps. This gives you the hard number you need for Step 3.

3

Calculate Total Deadhead

Add up every empty mile you'll drive to reach the shipper. Include any detours from your planned route. If you're 150 miles away and the most direct route is 160 miles due to road conditions, use 160. Round up, not down. This is the number you'll present to the broker.

4

Present Your Ask

Be direct and specific. State the facts, then state your rate. Don't apologize for asking. A strong script: "The pickup is 150 miles from my current location. I need $1.50 per mile for the deadhead to make this work. That's $225 for the repositioning." Give them a concrete number, not a vague request.

5

Compromise If Needed

If the broker pushes back, have fallback positions ready. "Can we split the difference?" is a classic that often works. Another option: accept lower deadhead pay in exchange for a higher loaded rate. For example, drop your deadhead ask by $0.25/mile but add $0.15/mile to the loaded rate. Do the math in real time to make sure the total still works.

Sample Script: Putting It All Together

“Hey, I'm looking at this load from Chicago to Memphis. My truck is currently in Indianapolis — that's about 180 miles to the pickup. At $1.50 a mile for deadhead, that's $270. Can you build that into the rate, or add it as a separate line item? If we can't do the full deadhead, what if we bump the loaded rate by 15 cents a mile to split the difference?”

Getting Deadhead Pay on Rate Confirmations

Negotiating deadhead pay means nothing if it's not documented. The rate confirmation is your contract. If deadhead pay isn't on it, you won't get paid.

Separate Line Item (Preferred)

The clearest method. Rate con shows: Line haul: $2,400 | Deadhead: $225 (150 mi x $1.50) | Total: $2,625. This makes payment verification simple and disputes rare.

Built Into All-In Rate

Some brokers prefer a single total. Rate con shows: All-in rate: $2,625. This works, but make sure you have email or text confirmation showing the deadhead component was included. Screenshot everything.

Higher Per-Mile Loaded Rate

Instead of separate deadhead pay, the broker increases the loaded rate to compensate. A $2.50/mi load becomes $2.80/mi to account for 150 miles of deadhead. Do the math to confirm it covers your empty miles.

Verbal Promises Don't Count

If a broker says “we'll take care of the deadhead” on the phone but the rate con shows a flat rate with no deadhead line item, you have no legal basis to collect. Get it in writing before you start your truck. Every time. See our rate confirmation guide for more on protecting yourself.

Deadhead as a Tax Deduction

Even when you can't get deadhead pay from a broker, those empty miles are still deductible business expenses. Here's what you need to know.

What to Track

  • Total miles driven — loaded and empty, tracked by your ELD
  • Fuel receipts — every fill-up, including during deadhead runs
  • Dates and locations — when and where you drove empty
  • Purpose of deadhead — repositioning for a load, returning from delivery, etc.

Deduction Methods

  • IRS standard mileage rate — simpler but often results in a smaller deduction for truckers
  • Actual expenses — fuel, maintenance, depreciation, insurance. Usually a larger deduction for owner-operators

Recommendation: Consult a trucking-specific accountant. They know the deductions unique to our industry and can save you thousands. General tax preparers often miss trucking-specific write-offs.

Track Every Mile

Your ELD logs every mile you drive — loaded and empty. At tax time, those empty miles add up fast. A carrier running 15% deadhead on 120,000 annual miles has 18,000 deductible empty miles. At $0.55/mile in actual fuel cost alone, that's $9,900 in deductible fuel expenses from deadhead. Don't leave that money on the table.

When NOT to Ask for Deadhead Pay

Knowing when to ask is important. Knowing when NOT to ask is equally important. Pushing for deadhead pay in the wrong situation can cost you loads and broker relationships.

Short Deadhead (Under 50 Miles)

Under 50 miles is considered normal repositioning in the industry. Asking for deadhead pay on a 30-mile drive to pickup makes you look inexperienced. Save your negotiation capital for when it matters.

Load Already Pays Premium Rate

If the loaded rate is already well above market — say $3.50/mile when the lane average is $2.80 — the broker has likely already factored in deadhead. Pushing for additional deadhead pay on a premium load is a quick way to lose the booking.

Building Relationship With a New Broker

The first load with a new broker is about proving reliability. If the deadhead is moderate (50-75 miles) and the loaded rate is fair, consider accepting without deadhead pay. Once you have 3-5 loads with them, you have leverage to negotiate better terms.

Strategic Repositioning (Your Choice)

If you're choosing to deadhead to a better freight market — driving empty from a dead zone to a hub where loads pay more — that's your business decision, not the broker's problem. Deadhead pay is for when the load requires you to come to it, not when you're repositioning by choice.

How Our Dispatchers Handle Deadhead Pay

As a dispatch service that books loads daily, we deal with deadhead negotiation on every shift. Here's our process for protecting carrier revenue on empty miles:

  • We negotiate deadhead compensation for pickups over 75 miles. Under 75, we focus on getting the best loaded rate. Over 75, deadhead pay is non-negotiable — it goes on the rate con or we find a different load.
  • We calculate total revenue per mile including deadhead before accepting. A $2,500 load on 800 miles sounds great — until you factor in 200 miles of unpaid deadhead. $2,500 / 1,000 total miles = $2.50/mi, not $3.13/mi. We do this math on every load.
  • We document deadhead on rate confirmations. Whether it's a separate line item or built into a higher loaded rate, the agreement is in writing. No verbal promises.
  • We track broker deadhead fairness over time. Brokers who consistently refuse reasonable deadhead pay on remote pickups get deprioritized. We focus our carriers' capacity on brokers who understand the cost of empty miles.

Try Our Free Deadhead Miles Calculator

Calculate deadhead distance, fuel cost, and revenue impact

Open Deadhead Miles Calculator

Deadhead Pay FAQ

Common questions about negotiating deadhead pay and deducting empty miles

What's the standard deadhead pay rate per mile?

There's no universal standard. Typical negotiated rates range from $1.00-$2.00 per mile for deadhead distances of 50-200 miles. Over 200 miles, expect compensation close to loaded rates. Under 50 miles, deadhead pay is rarely offered unless you negotiate it upfront. The key is knowing your cost per mile and not accepting loads where total revenue per total miles falls below that number.

Can I deduct deadhead miles on taxes?

Yes. Empty miles driven for business purposes are deductible business expenses. Track all miles with your ELD and keep fuel receipts for every fill-up during deadhead. You can use the IRS standard mileage rate or deduct actual expenses (fuel, wear, maintenance). Most trucking-specific accountants recommend actual expenses for owner-operators because it usually results in a larger deduction.

Should deadhead pay be a separate line item on the rate con?

Ideally yes, for clarity and documentation. A separate line item makes it easy to verify payment and reference later if there's a dispute. Some brokers build deadhead compensation into the all-in rate instead. Either way, get the total agreed amount in writing on the rate confirmation before you start driving. Verbal agreements have no legal weight.

How far is too far to deadhead for a load?

When deadhead drops your revenue per total mile below your cost per mile (typically $1.50-$1.80/mi for owner-operators). For example, a $2,500 load on 800 loaded miles pays $3.13/mi loaded. But if you deadhead 300 miles to get there, your revenue per total mile drops to $2.27/mi (2500 / 1100). Still profitable, but much tighter. Always calculate revenue per TOTAL miles, not just loaded miles.

Do dedicated contracts include deadhead pay?

Most dedicated contracts build deadhead compensation into the per-mile rate. The contract rate accounts for the average deadhead percentage on that lane or network. Negotiate this upfront when setting contract terms. Ask for historical data on average deadhead percentage so you can verify the rate truly covers your empty miles. If the contract involves long repositioning, push for a separate deadhead clause.

We Negotiate Deadhead Pay for You

Our dispatchers calculate true revenue per mile and negotiate deadhead compensation when the math demands it.

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