How To Calculate & Improve Fleet Utilization (Formula + Metrics)

Running a supply chain is never simple - and keeping a fleet on track is no different. Day after day, your team must juggle rising fuel costs, breakdowns, driver schedules, capacity issues, and even the weather.
In the middle of all that, the goal remains the same: to make the most out of every resource and process. The best place to start? By calculating your fleet utilization numbers.
Such metrics reveal whether your assets are really working for you - or just taking up space.
What Is Fleet Utilization?
Fleet utilization is a core metric in logistics that reveals if vehicles and equipment are being utilized to their fullest potential. It takes into account the "who, what, where, when, and how" of a fleet's activity and compares them against their full operational capacity. Expressed as a percentage, it serves as a key performance indicator (KPI) linking asset performance with overall efficiency.
Why fleet asset utilization matters:
Here’s an example: according to recent data,
58%
of truckloads moved half-empty on U.S. roads last year, highlighting a significant surge in truckload underutilization and a clear sign of how much opportunity remains untapped in fleet operations.
The Cost Of Poor Fleet Utilization
Without actionable visibility into operations, businesses, especially SMBs, can lose
20% to 30%
of their annual revenue - just from inefficiencies in fleet management.
How can you fix that?
Let’s look at an example: to calculate truck utilization, sophisticated systems track trailer dormancy - meaning the length of time assets sit idle - and provide clear insight into asset productivity while exposing gaps between potential and reality.
Other metrics you can track include hours worked, miles driven, and uptime. Such comprehensive visibility into fleet operations gives you the data you need to better manage costs and deploy assets, and strengthen overall performance.
Fleet utilization measures the extent to which the fleet is operational relative to its maximum possible capacity.
How Do You Calculate Fleet Utilization? (+ formula samples)
Calculating fleet utilization across your logistics operations starts by tracking operating data for individual vehicles.
Use fleet and trailer monitoring software to compare actual work performed with maximum possible capacity.
Though easier said than done, here are some vehicle utilization-specific formulae to get you started. The three most common metrics are: time (vehicle hours), distance (mileage), and capacity - meaning overall asset capacity, not merely your fleet’s volumetric trailer capacity.
Core Fleet Utilization Formula (Time-Based)
The most basic formula focuses on the amount of time vehicles are utilized (often measured in "billable hours") relative to the time they’re available.
The calculation relies on three main numbers:
- Total number of working vehicles in your fleet.
- Total billing hours available: the maximum number of hours that could be billed in a day, based on your company’s standard operating hours.
- Total hours billed: the actual number of hours each vehicle worked or was billed for that day.
So, to find the utilization rate, divide the total hours billed by the total billing hours available (vehicles × available hours per vehicle), then multiply by 100 to get the percentage of how much of your fleet’s potential was used.
Here’s the formula:
Fleet utilization percentage = (total hours billed ÷ total billing hours available) × 100
Example of fleet utilization calculation:
If a fleet of three vehicles has a maximum capacity of eight hours daily each (24 total available hours), but records show they worked eight, seven, and five hours respectively (20 total billable hours), the utilization percentage in this case is 83% (rounded).
Distance-Based Utilization Formula (Trucking Fleets)
For trucking fleets, particularly those focused on long-haul transport, calculating utilization based on mileage capacity is an essential metric.
This type of vehicle utilization formula is:
Vehicle utilization rate = (total miles driven by the fleet ÷ total mileage capacity)
To find the components of this formula, you must first perform two preliminary calculations:
A Driver’s Average Miles:
Average miles per driver = (total miles driven by the fleet ÷ number of drivers)
The Company’s Mileage Capacity:
Total mileage capacity = (number of fleet vehicles × average miles per driver)
This mileage-based rate reveals underused mileage potential capacity caused by issues like:
- long idle periods between loads
- missed dispatch opportunities
- under-scheduled drivers
- poor vehicle maintenance
- poor route planning
Capacity Utilization Formula (LTL Fleets)
Every trailer with empty space represents a lost revenue opportunity - especially for Less-Than-Truckload (LTL) fleets.
This is why calculating the percentage of truckload carrying capacity you’re using - whether by gross weight or cubic volume - against what’s available helps you find smarter ways to add value to every cubic inch of your fleet.
The formula for truckload capacity utilization can be expressed as:
Truckload capacity utilized = (used trailer capacity ÷ total trailer carrying capacity)
By breaking fleet utilization down into time-, distance-, and capacity-based formulas, your operators can see the full story behind their performance.
Together, these calculations reveal where efficiency is lost - and where improvements can unlock significant revenue potential once you put them into action.
Here are a few practical steps to get started.
What Can You Do to Improve Your Fleet Utilization?
With all the numbers at hand, it’s time to take action and raise your vehicle utilization KPIs:
Leverage Real-Time Visibility Through Telematics
Modern fleet tracking platforms give instant insight into location and status, helping fleets make better use of every asset.
Optimize Deployment And Inventory
Real-time data gathered via
GPS fleet tracking
and trailer management software allows dispatchers to align available trailers with demand, ensuring that underused assets don’t sit idle when they could be earning.
Right-Size Your Fleet
Historical utilization data, idle time, and turnaround times all reveal where assets are being underused. Optimizing these areas may lead to selling, renting, or reallocating low-use equipment.
Embrace Predictive Maintenance
Telematics data on mileage, tire pressure, or diagnostic codes helps maintenance teams act before problems cause downtime. This proactive approach keeps trucks road-ready and utilization rates high.
Use Advanced Cargo Monitoring
Ultrasonic sensors and
smart trailer cameras
provide instant confirmation of whether a trailer is loaded or empty. That level of visibility eliminates guesswork, improves trailer turns, and keeps freight moving.
From Visibility To Results
Deliver better performance, mile after mile with the SkyBitz Solution. SkyBitz technology helps fleets stay in control by turning insight into performance. Powered by end-to-end visibility and intelligent automation, it delivers real-time trailer and cargo data, removing the guesswork and ensuring every trailer mile counts.
| Ready to see how much more your fleet could do? Contact SkyBitz today. |