The Freight Guru

Dry Van vs. Reefer: Which Trailer Is Right for Your Freight?

Dry van vs. reefer is one of the first equipment decisions a new carrier makes, and one of the most common mode questions shippers ask when their product doesn’t obviously need refrigeration. The two trailers look similar from the outside; the economics inside are very different.

Here’s the honest comparison — costs, rates, workload, and freight mix — for both sides of the market in 2026.

The Basics

A dry van is an enclosed, non-climate-controlled trailer — the box you see everywhere on the interstate. It hauls anything palletized, boxed, or loose that doesn’t need temperature control: retail goods, paper, packaging, furniture, non-perishable food.

A reefer (refrigerated trailer) is an insulated van with a refrigeration unit mounted on the nose. It holds a set temperature — frozen, chilled, or even heated — for produce, meat, dairy, seafood, pharmaceuticals, and anything else that spoils.

Cost to Own and Operate

Rates and Revenue

Reefer freight pays a premium over dry van — historically somewhere around 10–20% more per mile on the spot market — because the equipment costs more, the service bar is higher, and the freight is less forgiving. The premium widens during produce seasons, when regional harvests soak up reefer capacity and rates spike on specific lanes.

But revenue isn’t margin. After the unit’s fuel, extra maintenance, washouts, and longer dock times at food facilities, the net gap is narrower than the rate gap. Reefer rewards operators who run it deliberately — produce seasonality, food-grade discipline, cold-chain paperwork — and punishes those who bought the trailer just for the higher number on the load board. Rising 2026 rates lift both boats either way; see our 2026 freight market outlook for the demand picture.

Flexibility: Reefer’s Quiet Advantage

A reefer can haul dry freight (unit off), but a dry van can never haul reefer freight. In soft markets, reefer operators dip into dry van freight to keep wheels turning; dry van operators have no equivalent escape hatch. That optionality is worth something — it’s effectively a hedge you pay for in purchase price and maintenance.

Two cautions: hauling dry in a reefer adds weight (the unit and insulation cost you 1,500–3,000 lbs of payload), and food-grade discipline still applies — some prior loads disqualify you from hauling certain food products next.

For Shippers: When to Book Which

For Owner-Operators: How to Decide

Start with your market, not the trailer. If your home base sits in a produce region or a food-distribution corridor, reefer’s premium is real and recurring. If your freight base is retail, manufacturing, or e-commerce, dry van’s lower costs and simpler operation usually win — especially for a first truck, where capital is tight and every breakdown hurts. Run both scenarios at your actual cost per mile with our pay-per-mile calculator before you commit $100K+ to a cold box.

The Bottom Line

Dry van is the low-cost, deep-market default; reefer is a premium business with premium obligations. Reefer pays more per mile but costs more per mile — the winners are operators who treat cold chain as a specialty, and shippers who book the right box for the product instead of gambling with a Florida summer.

More equipment and freight strategy every week: subscribe to The Freight Guru podcast. Need dry, cold, or bonded capacity in South Florida? Our family at Go Freight runs it all from Miami.

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