Freight Calculator
Grain Freight Cost Calculator
Estimate the cost to ship grain by truck, rail or barge between any two US points — per mile, per ton and per bushel — using public USDA benchmark rates.
Orientation estimate from public USDA benchmark ranges (2026), not a quote. Barge applies to river corridors only. Rail assumes rail access at both ends.
Trucking cost per mile — how it’s calculated
Grain trucking is priced per loaded mile or per ton-mile. The calculator multiplies a benchmark rate of roughly $0.11–$0.20 per ton-mile by your tonnage and the road distance (great-circle distance inflated by a 1.30 road factor to approximate real highway miles). For a 25-ton truck that is about $3–$5 per loaded mile. Short hauls to the local elevator are cheapest; long door-to-door truck moves get expensive fast, which is why rail and barge take over beyond a few hundred miles.
Grain hauling rates: per mile, per ton, per bushel
The calculator reports every rate farmers and merchandisers compare: total cost, cost per mile, cost per ton, cost per ton-mile and cost per bushel. Per-bushel is the number that matters against your basis — it converts tonnage to bushels using the commodity test weight, so you can decide whether moving grain to a distant market beats selling locally.
- Truck: ~$0.11–$0.20 / ton-mile
- Rail: ~$0.035–$0.060 / ton-mile (covered hopper, ~100 t each)
- Barge: ~$0.012–$0.025 / ton-mile (river corridors, ~1,500 t each)
Bushels to tons & bushel weights
One metric ton equals 2,204.62 pounds, so the bushels in a ton depend on the crop’s test weight: corn 56 lb/bu (≈ 39.4 bu/t), wheat & soybeans 60 lb/bu (≈ 36.7 bu/t), sorghum 56 lb, barley 48 lb, oats 32 lb. The calculator does this conversion automatically so cost-per-bushel is always correct for the commodity you pick.
Rail & barge freight
Rail line-haul is estimated at $0.035–$0.060 per ton-mile over a corridor distance (1.20× straight-line) and only when the haul exceeds ~150 miles. Barge is the cheapest mode per ton-mile but only on river corridors (Mississippi, Illinois, Ohio) and long distances. A covered hopper railcar carries ~100 t; a grain barge ~1,500 t — the calculator shows how many cars or barges your shipment fills.
Grain hauling rates by commodity & state
Open a dedicated page with real per-state rates, example routes and local elevators.
Frequently asked questions
Ready to move the grain?
Find grain elevators and buyers near your route, or post your load to the AgroPost marketplace and get real offers from carriers.