Truck Industry Tech

Using online platforms, autonomy, electric and fuel-cell tech solutions to shape the future of trucking.

Overview

Tools and technologies shaping the future of trucking

Truck industry tech players are introducing next-generation technologies and tools, collectively referred to as “Truck Industry Tech,” comprising route planning and freight management apps, driving assist platforms, autonomous trucks, and electric and fuel cell truck components.

These tech solutions aim to shape the future of the truck industry by improving road safety and fuel efficiency while moving traditional freight matching and route planning online, providing convenience and cost savings for truck drivers, fleets, and shippers. The Internet of Things (IoT), sensors, and camera technologies have become essential to fueling the industry’s advancements.

Route planning, online freight matching platforms, and Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) Level 1 autonomous technology are in the commercial stage, whereas autonomous trucks (SAE level 4 and 5) and electric and fuel cell trucks are still in the early commercial stages.

Industry Updates

View all updatesicon
Market Sizing

The US Truck Industry Tech market could reach USD 44.0 billion–65.4 billion by 2033

Conservative case

USD 0.0 Bn

Base case

USD 0.0 Bn

Expansion case

USD 0.0 Bn

Market Mapping


Startups dominate the Truck Industry Tech space, particularly in the online freight platforms segment. Despite being relatively capital-intensive, segments like autonomous trucks and electric and fuel cell trucks have attracted considerable startup activity, boosted by the self-driving vehicle industry and the declining cost of autonomous technologies in general. For example, Alphabet’s Waymo managed to bring its Laser Bear Honeycomb LiDAR prices down by around 90% to roughly USD 7,500 by 2019 from the industry norm of USD 75,000 a few years before.

All the players in the online freight platforms and route planning apps segments have commercialized their product offerings and operate either in Go-to-Market or Expansion stages. However, most of the autonomous vehicle tech developers, some safety and driving assist tools providers, and electric and fuel cell truck makers are yet to commercialize their product offerings and are hence classified as Ideation or Minimum Viable Product.

Most of the incumbents operating in the space are either automotive companies such as Toyota, Tesla, General Motors, Volvo, and Daimler or tech giants such as Uber. Incumbents in the route planning and online freight platforms space also include truck stop and travel center companies like TravelCenters of America and Love's Travel Stops as well as established road travel planning and freight matching companies such as Trimble MAPS,  Zonar, and Direct Freight Services.

The Disruptors


The most prominent disruptors in the industry come from the electric and fuel cell trucks, and autonomous trucks segments—raising USD 5.6 billion and USD 5.4 billion, respectively (as of July 2024). These segments, despite having few disruptors, attract significant investor interest due to the high funding required for complex product development. Leading the charge, publicly listed companies Aurora Innovation and Nikola Motor Company (Nikola) have raised USD 3.7 billion and USD 3.4 billion, respectively, focusing on autonomous trucks and electric and fuel cell trucks.

Most disruptors operate in the online freight platforms segment, raising USD 1.8 billion in funding collectively, as of July 2024. These companies have reached commercial-scale operations, with all companies operating in Go-to-Market or Expansion stages. Flock Freight is the highest-funded company in this segment, raising USD 399 million as of July 2024. Germany-based Sennder and Loadsmart are the other prominent online freight platform providers, both having raised more than USD 300 million as of July 2024.

The industry also includes several companies that have been listed or propose to be listed via special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs), including electric and fuel cell truck makers Hyzon Motors, XOS, and REE Automtove, and autonomous truck maker Aurora Innovation.

Funding History

Competitive Analysis


Filter by a segment or companies of your choice
expand
 
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Product Overview
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Product Metrics
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Company profile
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
-
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

Incumbents


Incumbents in the autonomous and alternative fuel truck space are well-established truck manufacturers, with the majority offering self-driving tech as well. For example, Volvo Trucks develops its own autonomous truck dubbed “Vera” while also offering a collision mitigation system called 'Volvo Active Driver Assist.'

Incumbents in the route planning and online freight platforms space include truck stop and travel center companies that introduce their own apps (TravelCenters of America, Love's Travel Stops), as well as other established road travel planning and freight matching companies with separate apps for truck drivers (Trimble MAPS, Zonar, and Direct Freight Services).

In House Development
M&A
Partnership
Investment
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

Notable Investors


?
Funding data are powered by Crunchbase
arrow
menuarrow
close

Contact us

Gain access to all industry hubs, market maps, research tools, and more
Get a demo

Overview

Online platforms and self-driving, electric, fuel cell technologies are shaping the future of trucking

The trucking industry is the most dominant form of logistics in the US. In 2022, the industry’s revenue amounted to USD 940.8 billion (80.7% of the country’s freight bill), and it employed nearly 8.4 million people, including 3.5 million truck drivers. As such, the national economy is heavily dependent on truck transportation and, in recent years, priorities like fuel efficiency, safety, and moving online have increasingly taken precedence. Global climate change concerns have also driven policymaking toward a zero-emission future. Collectively, these developments have spurred industry players to introduce next-gen technologies and tools (collectively referred to as “Truck Industry Tech”), such as route planning apps, online freight matching apps, safety and driving assist tools, autonomous trucks, and electric and fuel cell truck technologies.
These tech solutions aim to shape the future of the truck industry by improving road safety and fuel efficiency while moving traditional freight matching and route planning online, providing convenience and cost savings for truck drivers, fleets, and shippers. Route planning, online freight matching platforms, and Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) Level 1 autonomous technology are at the commercial stage, whereas most autonomous (SAE Level 4 and 5) and electric and fuel cell trucks are still in the early commercial stages.

Principal trucking industry technologies

Internet of Things and sensor technologies fuel trucking industry tech

Internet of Things (IoT) facilitates route planning and online freight matching apps, enabling better location tracking, environment reporting (route and weather conditions), fleet management, and a better supply-demand balance. Applicable IoT features in this context include connected sensors, electronic monitors, actuators, GPS receivers, RFID systems, and beacons that are integrated with physical devices and trucks. These tools are essential to most route-planning functions, freight-matching platforms, and self-driving solutions.
Click here to learn more
Get a demo

By using this site, you agree to allow SPEEDA Edge and our partners to use cookies for analytics and personalization. Visit our privacy policy for more information about our data collection practices.