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Heavy Haul Weight Guide

RGN Trailer Weight Capacity: From 42,000 to 150,000+ Pounds

The weight an RGN trailer can legally carry depends on its axle configuration, the Federal Bridge Formula, and state weight regulations. This guide breaks down capacity by axle count, explains how to calculate actual payload, and covers the permit thresholds that determine when overweight permits are required.

42K lbs

2-Axle Capacity

80K lbs

Federal GVW Limit

150K+ lbs

Multi-Axle Superload

16-20K lbs

Standard Tare 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 calculating heavy haul weight capacities, managing overweight permits, and ensuring Federal Bridge Formula compliance

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.

RGN Weight Capacity by Axle Count

The number of axles on the trailer is the primary factor determining weight capacity. More axles spread the load across more contact points, satisfying the Federal Bridge Formula and allowing higher total weight. Here is the full breakdown:

Trailer AxlesTotal Axles (w/ Tractor)Legal PayloadApprox. GVWPermit Needed?
2-axle542,000-44,000 lbs~78,000 lbsUsually no
3-axle652,000-54,000 lbs~90,000 lbsYes (over 80K GVW)
4-axle765,000-70,000 lbs~105,000 lbsYes
5-axle880,000-90,000 lbs~120,000 lbsYes + escorts
7-9 axle10-12100,000-120,000 lbs~150,000 lbsYes + escorts + route survey
13-20 axle16-23120,000-150,000+ lbs180,000-250,000+ lbsSuperload: full engineering

These payload figures are approximate and vary by specific trailer model, tractor weight, and state regulations. The GVW column represents the total combined weight of tractor, trailer, and cargo — the number that determines whether you need an overweight permit.

Payload Is Not the Same as Trailer Rating

Trailer manufacturers rate their trailers by structural capacity — the maximum weight the trailer frame can physically support. But your legal payload is determined by highway regulations, which are almost always more restrictive than the structural rating. A trailer rated for 60,000 lbs structural capacity might only be legal for 42,000 lbs of payload because the GVW limit is 80,000 lbs and the tractor + trailer weigh 38,000 lbs empty. Always calculate based on legal limits, not just the trailer's mechanical capacity.

How to Calculate Actual Payload

The payload (how much freight you can legally carry) is what remains after subtracting the tractor and trailer weight from the legal GVW limit:

Payload Formula

Legal Payload = Legal GVW Limit - Tractor Weight - Trailer Tare Weight

Example: Standard 2-Axle RGN (No Permit)

80,000 lbs (GVW limit) - 18,000 lbs (tractor) - 18,000 lbs (trailer) = 44,000 lbs payload

Example: 5-Axle RGN (With Overweight Permit)

120,000 lbs (permitted GVW) - 18,000 lbs (tractor) - 30,000 lbs (trailer) = 72,000 lbs payload

Example: 13-Axle RGN (Superload)

200,000 lbs (permitted GVW) - 20,000 lbs (tractor) - 50,000 lbs (trailer) = 130,000 lbs payload

Notice how the heavier multi-axle trailers consume more of the GVW limit with their own tare weight. A 13-axle RGN trailer can weigh 40,000-60,000 lbs empty — a significant chunk of the total allowable weight. This is the tradeoff: more axles allow higher GVW limits but the additional steel adds weight that reduces net payload per pound of trailer capacity.

Weigh the Actual Tractor and Trailer Before Loading

Published tare weights are estimates. The actual weight varies by fuel load, toolboxes, chains, binders, and aftermarket additions. Before hauling a load that is near the legal limit, weigh the empty tractor and trailer at a certified truck scale. A tractor with full fuel tanks weighs 1,000-1,500 lbs more than with half tanks. When you are close to the 80,000 lb threshold, every pound matters.

Federal Bridge Formula Explained

The Federal Bridge Formula (Formula B) determines the maximum weight allowed on any group of consecutive axles based on the number of axles and the distance between the first and last axle in the group. The formula exists to protect bridges and road surfaces from concentrated weight that could cause structural damage.

The key principle: spreading weight across more axles over a longer distance allows more total weight. This is why multi-axle RGN trailers can legally carry more — the additional axles and the longer wheelbase distribute the load.

Single axle limit: 20,000 lbs maximum per single axle

Tandem axle limit: 34,000 lbs maximum per tandem (two axles spaced 40-96 inches apart)

Gross vehicle weight: 80,000 lbs maximum without overweight permits (regardless of axle count)

Bridge Formula: Determines the max weight for any axle group based on number of axles and outer bridge (distance between first and last axle)

Even with overweight permits, the Bridge Formula still applies — the permits simply raise the allowable limits. A 5-axle RGN with an overweight permit might be allowed 120,000 lbs GVW, but each axle group must still comply with the Bridge Formula calculations at the permitted weight level.

Overweight Permit Thresholds

The federal GVW limit is 80,000 lbs. Any load that puts the total vehicle weight above 80,000 lbs requires an overweight permit in every state on the route. Here is what to expect at different weight levels:

GVW RangePermit LevelTypical Requirements
Under 80,000 lbsNo permit neededStandard 5-axle vehicle. Legal on all roads without weight permits.
80,001-105,500 lbsStandard overweightSingle-trip OW permit. Many states process same-day. May restrict travel to daytime hours.
105,501-120,000 lbsHeavy overweightRequires additional axles. Some states require escort vehicles. Route restrictions may apply.
120,001+ lbsSuperloadRoute survey, bridge analysis, engineering review, escorts, possible law enforcement escort. 2-4 week lead time.

Overweight permit costs vary by state: $15-$100 for a standard single-trip permit in many states, $200-$500 for heavy overweight, and $500-$5,000+ for superloads requiring engineering review. Multi-state routes accumulate permit costs from each state. For detailed permit requirements, see our RGN trailer permits and regulations guide.

Overweight Fines Are Extremely Expensive

Running overweight without a permit can result in fines of $1,000-$16,000+ depending on the state and how much weight exceeds the limit. Some states assess fines per pound over the limit (e.g., $0.05-$0.10 per pound). A load that is 20,000 lbs over the legal limit without a permit could face a $2,000-$4,000 fine at a single weigh station — and additional fines in the next state. The permit that costs $100-$500 prevents thousands in potential fines. Never run overweight without proper permits.

Superload Requirements (120,000+ lbs)

When a load exceeds approximately 120,000 lbs GVW (the exact threshold varies by state), it enters superload territory. Superloads require significantly more planning, lead time, and cost:

Route survey — a physical inspection of the planned route to identify low bridges, narrow roads, sharp turns, and other obstacles that could prevent passage

Bridge analysis — a structural engineering review of every bridge on the route to confirm it can support the loaded vehicle weight. Some bridges may need to be crossed one vehicle at a time.

Multiple escort vehicles — typically one front and one rear pilot car, and in some states, law enforcement escorts for the heaviest loads

Restricted travel times — superloads are typically restricted to daytime hours, weekdays only, and may be prohibited on certain holidays

Lead time — superload permits can take 2-4 weeks (sometimes longer) to process because of the engineering review requirements

The additional cost for superload permitting, engineering, and escorts can add $5,000-$25,000+ to the total shipment cost, on top of the base hauling rate. This is why RGN rates for superloads can reach $20+ per mile.

State-by-State Weight Variations

While the federal GVW limit is 80,000 lbs, some states have higher or lower limits on certain roads, and the maximum weight they will permit varies significantly:

Higher state limits — Some states (Michigan, for example) allow up to 164,000 lbs on certain state roads with enough axles. These are state-specific provisions that do not apply on the Interstate Highway System.

Seasonal restrictions — Many northern states impose reduced weight limits during spring thaw (March-May) when roads are most vulnerable. Weight limits can drop 10-25% on secondary roads during these periods.

Bridge-posted limits — Individual bridges may be posted with weight limits lower than the state maximum. These posted limits override state and federal limits. Route planning must account for every bridge on the path.

Maximum permit weight — Some states will not issue overweight permits above a certain threshold (e.g., 250,000 lbs), effectively prohibiting superloads that exceed that weight from transiting the state.

Multi-state heavy haul routes must comply with the most restrictive state on the route. If one state will only permit 120,000 lbs and the rest allow 150,000 lbs, the load is limited to 120,000 lbs unless an alternate route bypasses the restrictive state.

How Our Team Manages Weight Compliance

At O Trucking LLC, weight compliance is built into every heavy haul dispatch:

Pre-booking weight analysis

Before booking any RGN load, we calculate the total GVW using the actual tractor and trailer weights plus the cargo weight. If the load exceeds 80,000 lbs, we identify the correct axle configuration and apply for overweight permits before the driver arrives at the job site.

Axle configuration matching

We match the cargo weight to the appropriate trailer axle count. Sending a 2-axle RGN for a 60,000 lb piece of equipment would put the vehicle over legal weight. We confirm the carrier has the right number of axles before booking.

Multi-state permit coordination

For overweight loads crossing multiple states, we apply for permits in every state on the route and account for each state's specific weight limits and restrictions. We factor all permit costs into the rate before the load is booked.

Need Heavy Haul Dispatch That Gets the Weight Right?

Our dispatchers calculate GVW, match axle configurations, and secure overweight permits before every heavy haul booking. No surprises at the scale, no fines on the road.

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