The 30-Second Answer
Use LTL when you're shipping 150–10,000 lbs, the freight can tolerate 3–5 transit days, and the cargo can handle being moved between terminals. Use expedited when missing the delivery window costs more than the freight itself — line-downs, surgical equipment, JIT manufacturing, perishables. The break-even is usually somewhere around 2× the LTL rate.
What Each One Actually Is
LTL (Less-Than-Truckload)
Your freight shares a trailer with other shippers' freight. It rides from your dock to the carrier's terminal, gets sorted, loaded onto a line-haul trailer, runs to a destination terminal, gets sorted again, and goes out on a P&D (pickup and delivery) tractor to the consignee. A single LTL shipment is typically handled 4–7 times.
Carriers: Old Dominion, FedEx Freight, XPO, Estes, Saia, R+L.
Expedited Freight
Your freight gets its own truck (or a clearly dedicated portion of it) and goes directly from origin to destination. It's typically picked up the same day, run by team drivers for anything over ~600 miles, and delivered without intermediate handling.
Carriers: regional expedited specialists (us), FedEx Custom Critical, Panther Premium, Load One.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | LTL | Expedited |
|---|---|---|
| Transit time (Michigan → Texas) | 3–5 business days | 24–30 hours |
| Cost (1,000 lb pallet, Michigan → Texas) | ~$400–$600 | ~$2,200–$3,500 |
| Handling touches | 4–7 | 0–1 |
| Damage risk | Higher (multiple handoffs) | Lower (single chain of custody) |
| Tracking granularity | Terminal scans | Live GPS |
| Pickup window | Next business day | 2–4 hours |
| Best for | Routine, non-urgent | Time-critical, fragile, high-value |
The Total-Cost Decision Framework
Cost-per-shipment is the wrong number to optimize on. The right number is:
Expected freight cost + Expected cost of delay × Probability of delay
LTL has low base cost but high delay probability. Expedited has high base cost but near-zero delay probability. The crossover point is when (delay cost × delay probability) exceeds the cost difference.
Worked Example: Automotive Tier-1 Supplier
- LTL: $500 freight, 15% probability of arriving late, $25,000 line-down cost if late
- Expected total: $500 + (0.15 × $25,000) = $4,250
- Expedited: $2,800 freight, 1% probability of arriving late, $25,000 line-down cost if late
- Expected total: $2,800 + (0.01 × $25,000) = $3,050
- Expedited wins by $1,200 — even though it looks 5× more expensive on the rate sheet.
When LTL Is Genuinely the Right Call
- You can plan 5+ business days out
- The freight has standard pallet dimensions and isn't fragile
- The downstream consequence of a 2-day delay is "we restock the shelf later" — not "the plant stops"
- You're shipping under 1,000 lbs and the consignee accepts terminal-to-terminal scans
When Expedited Is the Right Call
- Line-down recovery (automotive, manufacturing)
- Production-critical inbound (JIT)
- Pharmaceutical / medical / surgical shipments
- High-value freight (>$50K cargo value)
- Cross-border where customs delays compound terminal delays
- Service-level penalties in the customer contract
Frequently Asked Questions
Is expedited freight always faster than LTL?
Yes. Expedited goes directly from origin to destination with no intermediate sorting. LTL passes through 1–2 terminals minimum, which adds 2–4 days of transit.
Can I use expedited for a single pallet?
Yes — and it's often where expedited makes the most sense. A single pallet on a hotshot truck for $1,200 can replace a $300 LTL shipment that would have cost you a $20,000 line-down.
Does expedited cost more per mile than LTL?
Per mile, yes. Per shipment, sometimes. Per dollar of risk avoided, usually no — which is the only comparison that matters for production-critical freight.