Fleets Running Older Equipment Experience Significant Financial Consequences

As fuel prices rise, the cost gap between older, less efficient equipment and newer, more fuel-efficient trucks continues to widen.

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Upgrading from a 2022 sleeper to a 2028 model can save organizations up to $12,845 per vehicle in the first year. For a 100-truck fleet, these savings scale to $1,284,500, assuming no tariff adjustments, according to Fleet Advantage’s Truck Life Cycle Data Index (TLDI).

Released against the backdrop of a national diesel fuel crisis, with prices surpassing $5.20 per gallon and higher in certain regional markets, the data underscores the severe and growing financial consequences for organizations operating older model year equipment.

“The surge in diesel prices we’re witnessing today doesn’t create a new problem for our clients; it dramatically accelerates an existing one,” says Brian Antonellis, SVP, fleet operations for Fleet Advantage. “Our TLDI has consistently shown that older model year trucks carry a compounding cost burden across fuel, maintenance, and total cost of ownership. At almost $5.50-per-gallon diesel, that burden becomes a financial crisis. A fleet running 100 trucks from the 2022 model year will absorb over $1.2 million more per year in costs than a company with 2028 equipment. Our strategic and proven data-driven approach to multi-year procurement planning allows for better forecasting, more accurate budgeting, and the ability to take advantage of emerging technologies that can improve efficiency and reduce costs over time.”

Key takeaways:

·        The latest TLDI evaluates model year 2022 through 2026 trucks vs. new 2028 equipment in relation to the April 2026 national average diesel price of $5.47 per gallon.

·        As fuel prices rise, the cost gap between older, less efficient equipment and newer, more fuel-efficient trucks continues to widen, placing additional financial pressure on organizations running aging assets. What’s more, the current environment of volatile market conditions has many organizations actively researching alternative fuel options as a strategic component of their heavy-duty fleet procurement process.

·        For large private fleets, the financial exposure is exponentially greater. Fleet Advantage’s TLDI data shows the compounding cost advantage of newer equipment across fuel efficiency, maintenance and repair (M&R), and total all-in cost.

Fleet Advantage Truck Life Cycle Data IndexFleet Advantage

·        Fuel economy continues to represent a major portion of the savings available through truck replacement. Based on the TLDI, private fleets running 2022 model year sleepers can save $10,854 per truck in fuel alone in the first year following replacement with a 2028 MY truck; a 16% reduction in fuel expense and corresponding CO2 savings.

·        A multi-year procurement plan is essential to optimizing equipment acquisition and reducing TCO. Delaying replacement decisions carries real financial risk: rising material costs (steel, aluminum, advanced engine components), fluctuating emissions regulations, and evolving durability standards are all driving manufacturer production costs higher, and those increases flow directly into vehicle pricing.

·        Organizations with transportation fleets upgrading from 2022 MY save $11,864per unit: $1,186,400 per fleet of 100 trucks (with tariff).

  • Organizations with transportation fleets upgrading from 2023 MY save $10,101per unit: $1,010,100 per fleet of 100 trucks (with tariff).
  • Organizations with transportation fleets upgrading from 2025 MY still save $3,395 per unit: $339,500 per fleet of 100 trucks (with tariff).
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