Regional Transport Hubs
Nine regional intelligence hubs mapped to the U.S. freight corridor network.
All regions
Dense northeast freight corridors funnel commercial traffic between Boston, Hartford, and the Port of Boston.
I-95, I-90, I-91, I-84
Highest port and warehouse density in the country - Port of NY/NJ, Baltimore, and Norfolk anchor freight flow.
I-95, I-78, I-80, I-81, I-64
Atlanta, Charlotte, Jacksonville, and the Port of Savannah drive one of the fastest-growing freight markets.
I-95, I-75, I-85, I-10, I-20
Chicago and Detroit remain top-3 U.S. freight hubs - heavy manufacturing and truck-dealer density.
I-90, I-94, I-80, I-75, I-65
Port of Houston and South Louisiana handle the highest port tonnage in the nation - heavy oilfield and industrial truck demand.
I-10, I-45, I-59, I-49
Agriculture and cross-country truckload traffic through Kansas City, Omaha, and Oklahoma City.
I-29, I-35, I-70, I-80, I-44
Long inter-metro distances, mining fleets, and elevation-sensitive dispatch through Denver and Salt Lake City.
I-15, I-25, I-70, I-80, I-90
Border-adjacent freight through Phoenix, Tucson, Las Vegas, and El Paso lanes.
I-10, I-40, I-17, I-8, I-15
Ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach, Oakland, Seattle, and Tacoma drive the highest commercial truck import volume in the country.
I-5, I-405, I-10, I-15, I-84
