When it comes to trucking fleets, size isn’t the story anymore
My industry cronies read the Today’s Trucking Top 100 the same way I do. Who’s up, who’s down, who’s still around. It’s our “league standings” page. The higher the rank, the more clout the company has. Simple.
Or so it seems.
There’s no doubt Canada’s Top 100 carriers are our industry’s premium operators. It’s hard to scale up a fleet without prioritizing road safety, compliance, and disciplined operations. They invest in what matters. They serve their customers well.
But the list feels different this year. It still measures trucks and trailers, yet I can’t shake the feeling that the bigger story lies between the lines.
Today, more freight than ever is controlled by someone other than the carrier hauling it. Owning trucks used to mean owning customers. Now it’s about owning risk.

Broker buffet
Freight brokers are gaining market share and growing more powerful in their relationships with shippers. They’ve built businesses around flexibility, technology, and simplicity at a time when supply chains have become more complex. Even mediocre brokers can instantly source capacity, provide real-time visibility, and stay nimble on pricing when conditions shift.
The carrier market, meanwhile, has badly fragmented. Thousands of small operators entered trucking over the last decade and made money working the load boards, where there are no long-term commitments and few consequences for rotten service.
That’s the trap. The broker covers a load with a carrier it barely knows, the shipper gets burned, sours on truckers generally, and goes right back to the broker next time it’s desperate for a truck. But the carriers who care about service pay the price for everyone else’s bad performance.
Driver Inc. factor
A hundred-plus M&A transactions over the past decade taught me one thing: when you look at the Top 100 standings, trucks and trailers tell only part of the capacity story.
Many large carriers have added capacity with subcontracted incorporated drivers and internal brokerage divisions. The two work together. Brokerage arms source overflow and protect service commitments when owned assets are tight.
Now layer in Driver Inc. The Top 100 players treat fleet assets, Driver Inc, and brokerage as one integrated system they can flex to meet changing needs. Managed well, it smooths volatility, stays seamless to customers, and adds to the win column.
Special sauce
The Top 100 is no longer dominated by LTL and truckload players trying to be everything to everyone. The real growth is in bulk, tanker, car-haul, and other businesses built around specific equipment and networks that are hard to replicate.
The mushy middle is where companies get caught. They’re too big to pivot quickly, too general to protect margin, too exposed to compete on price alone.
The do-everything carrier is under enormous pressure right now. General freight, meanwhile, is drifting deeper into commodity pricing. And when freight becomes a commodity, margin becomes the casualty.
Consolidation, rewritten
Consolidation is still happening, but it’s changing shape. The traditional model has big carriers buying smaller carriers. They roll up fleets, customers, and lanes. Rinse and repeat.
That type of consolidation still exists, but it’s no longer the main driver of growth. Expansion is coming through contracts, embedded logistics, and managed transportation layers that sit between the shipper and carrier.
Less buying of trucks. More buying of freight flow. Less ownership of assets. More ownership of decisions. Today’s most influential players embed themselves deeply within the customer’s network, quietly shaping how freight moves without necessarily owning the equipment that moves it.
CCAA lifelines
The names aren’t important, but it’s interesting to see carriers on the Top 100 list after emerging from CCAA (Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act) protection. Insolvency used to mark the beginning of the end for a carrier. Fleets disappeared, assets were dispersed, and customers moved on.
Today, many large carriers in financial trouble are too valuable to liquidate. Lenders prefer restructuring balance sheets and securing new financing so the business can re-emerge at scale. Plus, the OEMs want nothing to do with old iron. Their lots are already overflowing with the repossessed trucks they were unlucky enough to get back.
The Top 100 used to measure size. Now it increasingly measures adaptability. Our industry is being defined by who owns the customers and who figured out how to do that without owning trucks.
Have your say
This is a moderated forum. Comments will no longer be published unless they are accompanied by a first and last name and a verifiable email address. (Today's Trucking will not publish or share the email address.) Profane language and content deemed to be libelous, racist, or threatening in nature will not be published under any circumstances.