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Weight & Regulations Guide

Lowboy Trailer Weight Capacity: How Much Can You Legally Haul?

The amount of weight a lowboy trailer can legally carry depends on the number of axles, the spacing between axle groups (bridge formula compliance), the gross vehicle weight limit in each state you travel through, and whether you have overweight permits. A standard 2-axle lowboy carries about 40,000 pounds. A 3-axle carries 60,000 pounds. Multi-axle configurations can handle 80,000 pounds or more. This guide covers the full weight picture.

40K lbs

2-Axle Payload

60K lbs

3-Axle Payload

80K+ lbs

Multi-Axle Payload

80K lbs

Federal GVW Limit

OT

O Trucking Editorial Team

Trucking Industry Experts

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

Fact-Checked by O Trucking Dispatch Team

5+ years managing heavy haul loads, calculating weight distributions, and coordinating overweight permits across all 48 states

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.

Weight Capacity by Axle Configuration

The number of axles on your lowboy trailer is the primary determinant of how much weight it can legally carry. More axles distribute the load across more contact points with the road surface, which reduces stress on bridges and pavement. Federal and state law sets maximum weight per axle and per axle group.

ConfigurationTrailer Axle CapacityApprox. PayloadApprox. GVWCommon Cargo
2-Axle Lowboy34,000-40,000 lbs~40,000 lbs~80,000 lbsSkid steers, mini excavators, small loaders
3-Axle Lowboy51,000-60,000 lbs~60,000 lbs~100,000 lbsLarge excavators, D6-D8 bulldozers
4-Axle Lowboy68,000-80,000 lbs~80,000 lbs~120,000 lbsCrawler cranes, D10+ bulldozers
5+ Axle (Perimeter)85,000-120,000+ lbs100,000+ lbs150,000+ lbsTransformers, mining trucks, superloads

These are approximate legal capacities. The exact payload depends on the specific trailer's tare weight, tractor weight, axle spacing (for bridge formula compliance), and the weight laws of each state on your route. Loads exceeding 80,000 pounds GVW always require overweight permits in every state.

Gross Vehicle Weight (GVW) Rules

The federal gross vehicle weight limit on the Interstate Highway System is 80,000 pounds. This means the combined weight of the tractor, trailer, and cargo cannot exceed 80,000 pounds without an overweight permit. Here is how a typical GVW calculation works:

Sample GVW Calculation (2-Axle Lowboy)

Tractor weight18,000 lbs
Lowboy trailer (2-axle FGN) tare weight17,000 lbs
Fuel, chains, binders, dunnage2,000 lbs
Total before cargo37,000 lbs
Federal GVW limit80,000 lbs
Available payload43,000 lbs

Federal axle weight limits also apply independently of GVW:

  • Single axle — Maximum 20,000 lbs
  • Tandem axle (2 axles) — Maximum 34,000 lbs
  • Tridem axle (3 axles) — Maximum 42,000 to 51,000 lbs (varies by axle spacing)
  • Steer axle — Maximum 12,000 to 14,000 lbs (varies by state and tire rating)

Every Axle Group Must Comply Individually

Even if your total GVW is under 80,000 pounds, you can still be cited for overweight if any individual axle or axle group exceeds its limit. A 75,000-pound total load with 38,000 pounds on the trailer tandem axles (limit: 34,000) is overweight on the tandems, even though the GVW is legal. Weight distribution matters as much as total weight. Position equipment on the deck to distribute weight evenly across all axle groups.

Bridge Formula: The Hidden Weight Limit

The Federal Bridge Formula (also called Formula B) is a mathematical formula that limits the weight on any group of consecutive axles based on the distance between the first and last axle in the group. Its purpose is to prevent excessive weight concentration that could damage bridges and road surfaces.

The formula is: W = 500 ((LN / (N-1)) + 12N + 36), where W is maximum weight in pounds, L is the distance in feet between the first and last axle of the group, and N is the number of axles in the group.

In practical terms, the bridge formula means that closely spaced axles cannot carry as much weight as widely spaced axles. This is why multi-axle lowboy trailers are longer — they need the extra length to spread axles far enough apart to comply with the bridge formula at their rated weight. If your axle spacing is too tight for the weight you are carrying, you are in violation even if your total GVW and individual axle weights are legal.

How to Calculate Your Available Payload

Follow these steps to determine exactly how much cargo your lowboy can legally carry:

1

Know Your Tractor Weight

Weigh your tractor at a certified scale with a full tank of fuel, all fluids, and any tools or equipment you carry. Typical day cab tractor: 16,000-19,000 lbs. Sleeper cab: 18,000-22,000 lbs.

2

Know Your Trailer Tare Weight

Get the actual empty weight of your specific trailer from a scale ticket, not the manufacturer's advertised weight. Include all securement equipment (chains, binders, straps, dunnage) that is always on the trailer.

3

Subtract from GVW Limit

Subtract tractor weight + trailer tare weight from the applicable GVW limit (80,000 lbs federal, or the permitted weight if you have an overweight permit). The result is your maximum payload.

4

Verify Axle Group Limits

After calculating total payload, verify that the equipment's position on the trailer distributes weight within each axle group's individual limit. Moving equipment forward or backward on the deck shifts weight between the steer axles, drive axles, and trailer axles.

When You Need Overweight Permits

You need overweight permits when your loaded vehicle exceeds 80,000 pounds gross vehicle weight or when any individual axle or axle group exceeds its limit. Overweight permits are issued by each state individually — a multi-state route requires permits from every state you travel through.

Overweight permit costs vary significantly by state and weight:

  • 80,001-100,000 lbs GVW — $15 to $200 per state (single-trip permits)
  • 100,001-120,000 lbs GVW — $50 to $500 per state
  • 120,001-150,000 lbs GVW — $100 to $1,000+ per state (often requires route survey)
  • Over 150,000 lbs GVW (superload) — $500 to $5,000+ per state, engineering analysis required

Overweight permits typically specify an exact route, travel times (often daytime only, no weekends or holidays), and may require escort vehicles. Deviating from the permitted route is a violation even if your weight is properly permitted.

Overweight Penalties

Getting caught overweight at a weigh station or during a DOT roadside inspection results in fines that escalate rapidly with the amount of excess weight:

Overweight AmountTypical Fine RangeAdditional Consequences
1-2,000 lbs over$50-300Warning or citation, may proceed after fine
2,001-5,000 lbs over$300-1,500Citation, may be required to off-load excess weight
5,001-10,000 lbs over$1,500-5,000Must off-load, possible OOS (out-of-service) order
10,000+ lbs over$5,000-20,000+OOS, possible criminal charges, CDL points, insurance impact

Overweight Violations Affect Your CSA Score

Overweight violations are recorded on your CSA score under the Vehicle Maintenance BASIC category. Multiple violations can trigger an FMCSA investigation and increase your insurance premiums. A single overweight fine might cost $500, but the resulting insurance increase could cost thousands per year. Always weigh your loaded vehicle before leaving the loading site.

State Weight Limit Variations

While the federal GVW limit is 80,000 pounds on Interstate highways, individual states have authority to set their own limits on state highways and roads. Some examples:

  • Michigan — Allows up to 164,000 lbs GVW on certain state highways with enough axles
  • Texas — Allows 84,000 lbs on specific state-maintained highways
  • Montana — Allows higher limits on specific routes with annual permits
  • Most states — Follow the federal 80,000 lb limit on Interstate highways

Weight Distribution Tips

Proper weight distribution is as important as total weight. Here are key practices:

Center the load on the well — Position equipment so its center of gravity falls between the trailer's axle groups, distributing weight as evenly as possible between drive axles and trailer axles.

Slide the trailer tandems — If your lowboy has sliding tandems, adjust axle position to shift weight between the drive axles and trailer axles until both groups are within their limits.

Weigh before leaving the site — Scale your loaded vehicle at the nearest certified scale before hitting the road. Check steer, drive, and trailer axle weights individually, not just total GVW.

Account for fuel weight — Diesel weighs about 7 pounds per gallon. A full 150-gallon fuel tank adds 1,050 pounds to your steer and drive axles. Consider fueling after loading if axle weights are tight.

Know Your Trailer's Weight Before You Get to the Job Site

Weigh your empty tractor and trailer combination once, record the weight by axle group, and keep that scale ticket in the truck. When you know your empty weight precisely, you can calculate whether a load will be legal before you ever pick it up — saving you the cost and time of loading equipment only to discover you are overweight.

How Our Team Manages Weight Compliance

At O Trucking LLC, we verify equipment weight against trailer capacity and GVW limits before booking every heavy haul load. We calculate payload availability, check bridge formula compliance, and coordinate overweight permits when needed. Our carriers never leave the yard without knowing their load is legal. For more on lowboy specifications, see our lowboy trailer dimensions guide and lowboy trailer glossary page.

Need a Dispatch Team That Gets Weight Right?

Our dispatchers calculate weight distribution, verify GVW compliance, and coordinate overweight permits for every heavy haul load. No surprises at the scale.

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