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Corn: $4.31/bu Apr 2026 Wheat: $5.70/bu Apr 2026 Soybeans: $11.20/bu Apr 2026 Corn: $4.31/bu Apr 2026 Wheat: $5.70/bu Apr 2026 Soybeans: $11.20/bu Apr 2026

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

Freight cost is the rate per ton-mile multiplied by the shipment weight (tons) and the route distance (miles). Our calculator uses public USDA grain-transportation benchmark rates per ton-mile for truck, rail and barge, scaled by the latest USDA cost indices, then multiplies by your tonnage and the road/rail/river distance between origin and destination.
Cost per mile = total freight cost ÷ route miles. For grain trucking, benchmark rates run roughly $0.11–$0.20 per ton-mile, so a 25-ton load works out to about $2.75–$5.00 per loaded mile. The calculator shows the per-mile figure for each mode.
By truck, grain hauling typically costs about $0.11–$0.20 per ton-mile (≈ $3–$5 per loaded mile for a 25-ton truck). Rail runs roughly $0.035–$0.060 per ton-mile and barge about $0.012–$0.025 per ton-mile, so rail and barge become much cheaper on longer hauls.
Per-bushel cost depends on distance, mode and the commodity’s test weight (corn 56 lb/bu, wheat & soybeans 60 lb/bu). The calculator converts tons to bushels and shows the per-bushel cost for each mode so you can compare against your basis.
Truck is most flexible and wins on short hauls. Rail becomes cheaper per ton-mile beyond ~150 miles, and barge is the cheapest per ton-mile of all but is limited to river corridors and long distances. The calculator estimates all three side by side so you can see the breakeven for your route.
A covered hopper railcar holds roughly 100 metric tons of grain — about 3,900 bushels of corn or 3,650 bushels of wheat/soybeans. The calculator shows how many railcars (or truckloads) your shipment fills.
A bushel of corn weighs 56 pounds at standard test weight. Wheat and soybeans are 60 lb/bu, sorghum 56 lb, barley 48 lb and oats 32 lb. One metric ton of corn is about 39.4 bushels.
No. US freight rates are private and contract-based. These are honest orientation estimates from public USDA benchmark ranges — a starting point for a marketplace conversation, never a binding price.

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.

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