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Used Freight Equipment Market Shows Signs of Recovery as Recession Hangover Fades

By MGN EditorialJune 2, 2026 at 12:00 AM

Rising freight rates and constrained new truck production are breathing new life into the used equipment auction market, signalling a broader recovery across the freight sector.

## Used Freight Equipment Market Shows Signs of Recovery as Recession Hangover Fades The prolonged downturn that has weighed heavily on the freight equipment market is showing meaningful signs of lifting, according to industry insiders tracking auction activity across North America. Steve Oliver of Taylor & Martin, one of the freight industry's leading equipment appraisal and auction firms, told FreightWaves that a confluence of factors is reshaping the used truck and trailer market after years of suppressed demand and excess inventory. ### Key Drivers of the Recovery Oliver points to three primary forces now working in tandem to stabilise and gradually elevate used equipment values: - **Rising freight rates:** As spot and contract rates recover from multi-year lows, carrier profitability is improving, encouraging fleet reinvestment and increasing buyer confidence at auction. - **Constrained new truck production:** Ongoing supply chain pressures and manufacturing bottlenecks have limited the availability of new Class 8 trucks, pushing operators toward the used market to meet capacity needs. - **Pandemic-era debt resolution:** Many carriers who took on significant debt during the COVID-19 boom years are now working through those obligations, gradually clearing distressed inventory that had been suppressing auction prices. ### Market Context The freight recession — broadly defined as the period of rate compression and volume decline that began in mid-2022 following the pandemic-era surge — left a significant overhang of used equipment on the market. Fleets that had over-expanded during the boom years were forced to liquidate assets at depressed prices, creating a buyer's market that persisted well into 2024. The gradual absorption of that excess inventory, combined with improving freight fundamentals, is now shifting the balance. For maritime-adjacent logistics operators — including drayage carriers, port trucking fleets, and intermodal service providers — the stabilisation of equipment costs represents a meaningful improvement in operational planning and capital expenditure forecasting. ### Outlook While Oliver's assessment is cautiously optimistic, analysts note that a full recovery in used equipment values will depend on sustained freight rate improvement and continued discipline in new truck ordering. Any renewed softness in freight demand could delay the market's return to equilibrium. Nonetheless, the signals from the auction floor suggest that the worst of the freight recession's aftereffects may be behind the industry — welcome news for carriers and logistics operators across the supply chain. *Source: FreightWaves / Taylor & Martin*
#freight rates#used equipment#trucking market#intermodal logistics#supply chain#drayage#freight recession

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