Line-Down Freight: How to Get Parts to a Stopped Production Line

A stopped automotive line bills $9,000–$50,000 per hour. Line-down freight is what runs while the rest of the supply chain catches up — and it gets paid to be right the first…
8 min read
May 8, 2026

It’s 2 a.m. on a Tuesday. A robotic welder at a tier-1 supplier in Indiana stops mid-cycle because a position sensor failed. The replacement is sitting at a distributor outside Chicago, 220 miles away. The Toyota assembly plant in Kentucky that takes the supplier’s parts on a JIT slot starts burning $30,000 an hour the moment the next inbound shift arrives empty.

That’s line-down freight. Not a freight category, a containment operation.

Line-down freight protects an active production stoppage. Standard expedited gets a load there fast. Line-down freight gets the truck moving before the PO is finalized, with a single dispatch chain accountable to the receiving plant from minute one.

What line-down freight actually means

Line-down freight is the most time-critical move in expedited shipping. The defining trait isn’t speed — it’s the absence of latency anywhere in the chain.

What separates it from standard expedited:

  • Pre-positioned dispatch: drivers and equipment ready before the booking call ends, not after it
  • Single-truck commitment: one driver or team, no consolidation, no tender shopping
  • Live status to the plant: dispatch and the receiver share the same clock in real time, not a tracking portal
  • Clearance-ready paperwork: BOL, hazmat, and dock contact handled in parallel with pickup
  • Override authority: the dispatcher can re-route, swap equipment, or split into two trucks without escalation

The premium per mile is real. The math against an idle line stops being a freight conversation by the second hour.

What is line-down freight?

Line-down freight is dedicated, point-to-point shipping for parts that resolve an active production stoppage. The load moves on a single truck — usually a cargo van, Sprinter, or straight truck — with priority dispatch and direct routing.

It’s distinct from same-day delivery, which is metro-only, and from standard expedited, which doesn’t assume the receiver is currently losing money by the minute. Anything routed through a terminal, consolidated with other freight, or quoted against a generic ETA is not line-down freight, no matter what the bill of lading calls it.

How fast does line-down freight move?

Transit depends on distance, equipment, and how clean the pickup is. A 250-mile single-driver run can land inside three to four hours when the part is staged and the dock is open. A 1,500-mile lane with a team driver typically runs 22–28 hours door-to-door.

The realistic frame: line-down freight removes the variable parts of transit (terminal time, dispatch latency, broker handoffs) and leaves only what physics requires. A real line-down carrier quotes against your drop-dead time, not a posted service window.

What a line-down event actually costs

Line-down events generate cost faster than almost any other operational failure in manufacturing.

Realistic ranges:

  • Mid-size manufacturing line: $5,000–$20,000 per hour in idle labor, idle equipment, and downstream commitments
  • Automotive OEM assembly: $30,000+ per hour, cascading through every JIT supplier on that plant’s tender schedule
  • Tier-1 supplier penalties: EDI 866 line-stop chargebacks in OEM contracts can exceed a supplier’s monthly margin on the program after a four-hour outage
  • Robotics and automation cells: scrap spikes when a cell restarts mid-cycle. The first 30 minutes of recovery cost almost as much as the stoppage itself

The freight premium for a dedicated truck is rarely the issue. The issue is whether the carrier you call can put a driver on the road in 20 minutes instead of 90.

When to use line-down freight

The decision is rarely about freight cost. It’s about which kind of stoppage you’re managing.

Tier-1 supplier to OEM, JIT replenishment

OEM assembly plants run tender schedules with no buffer stock. When a supplier misses a slot, the OEM pulls labor off the line or pays for rework. Line-down freight covers the gap when something breaks upstream.

Robotics, automation, and process equipment

A failed sensor, drive, or PLC module stops the entire cell. The replacement part is usually at a distributor or OEM service depot within 500 miles. Air freight rarely beats a dedicated truck on that distance once you account for terminal time.

Plant-floor MRO and maintenance kits

Scheduled PMs that hit a missing part become unscheduled outages by the next shift. Line-down freight moves the kit from the regional warehouse to the plant before the maintenance window closes.

Recall and containment work

When a quality issue requires immediate part replacement at a downstream plant or dealer network, the freight moves on a clock set by legal and engineering, not procurement.

If your line is down or about to be, you’re already in line-down freight territory. The question is whether your carrier can put a driver on the road in the next 30 minutes. Check capacity against your stop time →

Is line-down freight worth the cost?

For most non-emergency loads, paying line-down rates is wasted budget. The premium is built around dispatch overhead, the 24/7 coverage, the pre-positioned drivers, the override authority. None of that helps a load with a comfortable deadline.

It’s the right call when:

  • The line is currently stopped, or will be within the next shift
  • There’s no buffer stock and no parallel sourcing
  • The cost of one more hour of downtime exceeds the freight premium by 5x or more
  • A standard expedited carrier has already quoted a transit that misses the drop-dead time

Quick decision rule: do you actually need line-down freight?

The call usually clears up fast:

  • If the line is stopped right now → use line-down freight
  • If the line stops within the next 4 hours and there’s no buffer → use line-down freight
  • If the cost of one more hour of downtime is bigger than the freight premium → use line-down freight
  • If you’ve already missed a JIT slot and the OEM is on the phone → use line-down freight
  • If the part has a 24-hour buffer and a standard expedited transit clears it → use standard expedited
  • If the maintenance window is two days out → standard truckload is cheaper and the right fit
  • If the part is a same-metro move under 50 miles → use same-day delivery, not line-down

Operator rule: when in doubt, price both. The premium on a line-down booking is almost always smaller than 30 minutes of unplanned downtime on a tier-1 line.

Standard expedited vs line-down freight vs air freight

The three options cover different failure modes.

Option Dispatch model Cost level Recovery speed
Standard expedited Direct truck, scheduled dispatch Medium Hours to next-day
Line-down freight Pre-positioned dispatch, override authority High Minutes to dispatch, hours in transit
Air freight Commercial or charter, terminal handling at both ends Highest Fast in air, slow on ground

Standard expedited works when you’ve planned ahead and need a reliable direct truck. Air freight wins on transcontinental distance but loses on shorter lanes once you account for terminal dwell. Line-down sits between them: faster off the dispatch line than standard expedited, more responsive than air on lanes under 1,000 miles.

Why line-down dispatch fails

Line-down freight fails when there’s latency anywhere in the chain. Every minute between the call and the truck moving is a minute the line stays stopped.

Common failure points: a broker tenders the load to a third-party carrier and adds 30–60 minutes to dispatch; drivers aren’t pre-positioned and the closest one is 90 minutes from pickup; the carrier quotes against “as soon as possible” instead of the receiver’s drop-dead time; status updates travel through a phone tree because the driver, dispatcher, and account manager work for different companies.

The fix isn’t faster trucks. It’s removing handoffs. A direct carrier with its own fleet and own dispatch can put a driver in motion before paperwork is finalized, because dispatch, driver, and equipment all answer to the same operations team.

What your carrier needs from you

A line-down quote is only as good as the information the carrier has at the call. Have these ready before dialing:

  • Drop-dead time: the actual hour the part has to be on the receiving dock
  • Part details: PO number, part number, weight, dimensions, packaging
  • Pickup: warehouse address, dock hours, named contact, live phone
  • Special handling: hazmat class, temperature, signature, white glove, lift gate
  • Receiving plant: dock hours, contact, gate or guard requirements
  • Cost-of-delay context: what the receiver pays per hour. The carrier uses it to triage internally

A carrier that quotes without a drop-dead time is guessing. A carrier that asks about cost-of-delay is doing the work that protects the deadline once the truck is rolling.

If you’re managing an active stop and need to know whether a truck can hit your window, the fastest path is to put the load against current capacity. Check line-down capacity now →

When the line stops, the booking decision is simple

Every line-down event comes down to the same situation: a stopped line, a clock running on downstream cost, and a part 200 to 2,000 miles from where it needs to be. The freight rate isn’t the conversation. The conversation is which carrier puts a driver on the road first, owns the chain end-to-end, and lands the part on the dock at the time you said it would be there.

If you’ve got a part that has to move, get the details together: drop-dead time, PO and part number, pickup contact, receiver dock, special handling. Then request line-down capacity and a real expedited carrier will quote against the clock you gave them.

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