Glossary

Truck Trip Planning Glossary

Plain-English definitions for truck parking, HOS, fuel, weather, weigh station, and trip planning terms.

Trucking terms move fast in dispatch conversations, and the gaps show up at the worst times. A new dispatcher who doesn't know what detention does to the 14-hour clock accepts a load they shouldn't. A new driver who doesn't know how the 30-minute break interacts with the duty window takes it at the wrong place.

This glossary is built around the moments where a missing term becomes a planning failure — not around alphabetical order or regulatory completeness. Each definition is plain, practical, and focused on what the term actually means in a trip or dispatch conversation.

Where to start if you're new to this vocabulary

  • New CDL driver — read the 14-hour clock, 11-hour rule, 30-minute break, and ELD entries first. These four terms cover most of what the ELD shows you and what the dispatcher expects you to manage.
  • New dispatcher — read detention, 14-hour clock, trip plan, and backup parking plan. A dispatcher who understands how detention collapses the day is less likely to build a plan that only works if nothing goes wrong.
  • Owner-operator new to running under your own authority — read fuel surcharge, deadhead, and cost-plus fuel pricing alongside the HOS terms. These are the financial variables that interact with every load decision.
  • Experienced driver encountering a new equipment type or route — the chain law, mountain grade, and high wind warning entries are the ones most likely to matter in an unfamiliar corridor.

Terms by planning category

CategoryTerms coveredMost useful for
ParkingTruck parking, rest area, truck stop, reserved parking, paid parking, backup parking planDrivers and dispatchers building overnight stop plans
HOS14-hour clock, 11-hour rule, 30-minute break, sleeper berth, 34-hour restart, ELD, duty status, on-duty time, off-duty timeNew drivers, new dispatchers, anyone building realistic schedules
FuelFuel surcharge, reefer fuel, cost-plus pricing, retail diesel priceOwner-operators, dispatchers evaluating load profitability
WeatherChain law, high wind warning, adverse driving conditionsDrivers and dispatchers on mountain and weather-exposed corridors
Weigh StationsWeigh station, bypass, roadside inspectionNew drivers, dispatchers on enforcement-heavy lanes
Trip PlanningTrip plan, detention, deadhead, backup parking plan, route riskAll audiences — these terms appear in most load planning conversations

Terms that cause the most confusion

The 14-hour clock and the 11-hour driving limit are different things. Drivers who conflate them consistently underestimate how much of the day is already gone before the first mile. The 14-hour window starts the moment the driver goes on duty; the 11-hour limit caps only driving time within that window. Most days, the 14-hour window runs out first.

Detention and off-duty time are also frequently confused. Waiting at a dock that is logged on-duty counts against the 14-hour window; the truck is not moving but the clock is. This is the most common mechanism by which a plan that looked viable in the morning becomes an end-of-day parking problem by afternoon.

What trucking terms should a new dispatcher learn first?

Start with the four HOS constraints that govern driver scheduling: the 14-hour duty window, the 11-hour driving limit, the 30-minute break, and the 60/70-hour weekly limit. The 14-hour window is the most important — it runs from the moment the driver goes on duty, whether the truck is moving or not. Next: detention and trigger time. A dispatcher who understands how detention compresses the day will build better load plans. One who doesn't will keep being surprised by the same problem.

What HOS terms does a new CDL driver need to know before their first load?

The five that matter on a typical day: the 14-hour duty window (starts when you go on-duty; can't be extended by a short break), the 11-hour driving limit (caps only driving time, not total duty time), the 30-minute break requirement (after 8 hours of driving; does not pause the 14-hour window), the 34-hour restart (resets weekly cumulative hours), and ELD (the device that records everything). The gap between the 11-hour limit and the 14-hour window is where most new drivers lose clock time they didn't expect to lose.

Where should I look up current official trucking regulations?

FMCSA (fmcsa.dot.gov) is the primary source for HOS rules, ELD requirements, inspection standards, and safety regulations. State DOT websites are the primary source for state-specific truck route restrictions, rest area rules, and commercial vehicle guidance. The definitions here are simplified for planning conversations — always verify specific rule language with the official source before making compliance decisions.

A-Z glossary index

1

11-Hour Rule

HOS

The 11-hour driving limit and why, on most commercial driving days, it's the 14-hour duty window that runs out before the 11-hour driving limit does.

14-Hour Clock

HOS

How the 14-hour duty window works and why it affects dispatch timing, breaks, parking, and end-of-day decisions.

3

30-Minute Break

HOS

The HOS 30-minute break requirement — what it resets, what it doesn't add to the day, and why placement matters as much as the break itself.

34-Hour Restart

HOS

How a 34-hour restart resets weekly on-duty hours and why its location and timing affect the next load plan.

A

Adverse Driving Conditions

HOS

What the adverse driving conditions HOS exception allows, and why it cannot rescue a plan that was already too tight.

B

Backup Parking Plan

Parking

What makes a backup parking plan useful: a named stop, a trigger time, and enough hours to reach it.

C

Cost-Plus Fuel Pricing

Fuel

How cost-plus fuel pricing works, when it may beat retail-minus pricing, and what to compare before planning a stop.

D

Deadhead Miles

Fuel

What deadhead miles cost in fuel, HOS, and profitability, and why empty moves still need a real trip plan.

Detention Time

Trip Planning

How detention time drains the 14-hour window without adding miles — and what the dispatcher needs to do the moment wait time exceeds the plan's buffer.

E

ELD Duty Status

HOS

The four ELD duty statuses, how they affect HOS limits, and why classification errors can create inspection problems.

Electronic Logging Device (ELD)

HOS

What ELDs record, what officers review during an inspection, and what drivers and dispatchers should know before a trip.

F

Fuel Surcharge

Fuel

How fuel surcharges work in freight contracts and why FSC alone does not show whether a load's fuel economics are favorable.

H

High Wind Warning

Weather

What high wind warnings mean for trucks, and why trailer type and load weight shape the stopping decision.

Hours of Service (HOS)

HOS

Plain-language HOS meaning, key federal limits, and why hours shape parking, fuel, and appointment decisions before the truck moves.

L

Lumper Fee

Trip Planning

What lumpers do at receivers, how fees work, and what drivers should confirm before a live unload appointment.

M

Mountain Grade

Safety

Why mountain grades demand extra truck planning around brakes, load weight, descent gear, and stopping choices.

O

Off-Duty Time

HOS

What qualifies as off-duty time under HOS rules and how misclassified breaks can affect the 14-hour window.

On-Duty Time

HOS

What on-duty not driving means on an ELD log and why it often makes the workday longer than driving hours alone suggest.

P

Paid Truck Parking

Parking

What paid first-come truck parking is, how it differs from reserved parking, and when it functions as a Plan B on high-demand overnight corridors.

R

Reefer Fuel Planning

Fuel

What reefer fuel is, why it must be planned separately from tractor diesel, and why temperature loads need extra margin.

Reserved Parking

Parking

How reserved truck parking works, when it helps a tight HOS plan, and what check-in or cancellation rules can change.

Retail Diesel Price

Fuel

What retail diesel price means, how it appears in fuel formulas, and why pump price is not always the driver's net cost.

Roadside Inspection

Weigh Station

The three main DOT roadside inspection levels, what each one covers, and how document and vehicle preparation before the stop determines how long it takes.

Route Risk Planning

Trip Planning

How to spot route risk by segment, including weather, grades, metro timing, parking pressure, and service gaps.

Runaway Truck Ramp

Safety

What runaway truck ramps are, what they signal about a grade, and why descent preparation still comes first.

S

Safe Haven for Hazmat Stops

Safety

What safe haven means for hazmat emergency stops, and how it differs from ordinary parking decisions.

Sleeper Berth

HOS

How sleeper berth time works under HOS rules, including split-berth planning and common bunk-time misconceptions.

T

Truck Chain Law

Weather

What chain laws require, how state rules differ, and why missing equipment can break a winter trip plan.

Truck Parking

Parking

What truck parking means in trip planning, and why a usable legal stop matters before the clock or arrival window gets tight.

Truck Rest Area

Parking

What public rest areas provide, how they differ from truck stops, and why fill patterns or time limits matter in trip planning.

Truck Stop Planning

Parking

How truck stops support fuel, food, service, and parking, and why arrival timing matters near busy freight corridors.

Truck Trip Plan

Trip Planning

What a truck trip plan covers before departure, from HOS and fuel to parking, weather, and receiver timing.

W

Weigh Station

Weigh Station

What happens at a weigh station and why even a routine scale crossing can disrupt a tight appointment plan.

Weigh Station Bypass

Weigh Station

How weigh station bypass programs work, what a green signal means, and why documents still need to be ready.

34 terms shown

Guides in this section

Glossary

Truck Parking

What truck parking means in trip planning, and why a usable legal stop matters before the clock or arrival window gets tight.

Glossary

Reserved Parking

How reserved truck parking works, when it helps a tight HOS plan, and what check-in or cancellation rules can change.

Glossary

Paid Truck Parking

What paid first-come truck parking is, how it differs from reserved parking, and when it functions as a Plan B on high-demand overnight corridors.

Glossary

Truck Rest Area

What public rest areas provide, how they differ from truck stops, and why fill patterns or time limits matter in trip planning.

Glossary

Truck Stop Planning

How truck stops support fuel, food, service, and parking, and why arrival timing matters near busy freight corridors.

Glossary

Hours of Service (HOS)

Plain-language HOS meaning, key federal limits, and why hours shape parking, fuel, and appointment decisions before the truck moves.

Glossary

11-Hour Rule

The 11-hour driving limit and why, on most commercial driving days, it's the 14-hour duty window that runs out before the 11-hour driving limit does.

Glossary

14-Hour Clock

How the 14-hour duty window works and why it affects dispatch timing, breaks, parking, and end-of-day decisions.

Glossary

30-Minute Break

The HOS 30-minute break requirement — what it resets, what it doesn't add to the day, and why placement matters as much as the break itself.

Glossary

Sleeper Berth

How sleeper berth time works under HOS rules, including split-berth planning and common bunk-time misconceptions.

Glossary

34-Hour Restart

How a 34-hour restart resets weekly on-duty hours and why its location and timing affect the next load plan.

Glossary

Adverse Driving Conditions

What the adverse driving conditions HOS exception allows, and why it cannot rescue a plan that was already too tight.

Glossary

Electronic Logging Device (ELD)

What ELDs record, what officers review during an inspection, and what drivers and dispatchers should know before a trip.

Glossary

ELD Duty Status

The four ELD duty statuses, how they affect HOS limits, and why classification errors can create inspection problems.

Glossary

On-Duty Time

What on-duty not driving means on an ELD log and why it often makes the workday longer than driving hours alone suggest.

Glossary

Off-Duty Time

What qualifies as off-duty time under HOS rules and how misclassified breaks can affect the 14-hour window.

Glossary

Fuel Surcharge

How fuel surcharges work in freight contracts and why FSC alone does not show whether a load's fuel economics are favorable.

Glossary

Cost-Plus Fuel Pricing

How cost-plus fuel pricing works, when it may beat retail-minus pricing, and what to compare before planning a stop.

Glossary

Retail Diesel Price

What retail diesel price means, how it appears in fuel formulas, and why pump price is not always the driver's net cost.

Glossary

Reefer Fuel Planning

What reefer fuel is, why it must be planned separately from tractor diesel, and why temperature loads need extra margin.

Glossary

Weigh Station

What happens at a weigh station and why even a routine scale crossing can disrupt a tight appointment plan.

Glossary

Weigh Station Bypass

How weigh station bypass programs work, what a green signal means, and why documents still need to be ready.

Glossary

Roadside Inspection

The three main DOT roadside inspection levels, what each one covers, and how document and vehicle preparation before the stop determines how long it takes.

Glossary

Mountain Grade

Why mountain grades demand extra truck planning around brakes, load weight, descent gear, and stopping choices.

Glossary

Runaway Truck Ramp

What runaway truck ramps are, what they signal about a grade, and why descent preparation still comes first.

Glossary

Truck Chain Law

What chain laws require, how state rules differ, and why missing equipment can break a winter trip plan.

Glossary

High Wind Warning

What high wind warnings mean for trucks, and why trailer type and load weight shape the stopping decision.

Glossary

Backup Parking Plan

What makes a backup parking plan useful: a named stop, a trigger time, and enough hours to reach it.

Glossary

Truck Trip Plan

What a truck trip plan covers before departure, from HOS and fuel to parking, weather, and receiver timing.

Glossary

Detention Time

How detention time drains the 14-hour window without adding miles — and what the dispatcher needs to do the moment wait time exceeds the plan's buffer.

Glossary

Lumper Fee

What lumpers do at receivers, how fees work, and what drivers should confirm before a live unload appointment.

Glossary

Deadhead Miles

What deadhead miles cost in fuel, HOS, and profitability, and why empty moves still need a real trip plan.

Glossary

Route Risk Planning

How to spot route risk by segment, including weather, grades, metro timing, parking pressure, and service gaps.

Glossary

Safe Haven for Hazmat Stops

What safe haven means for hazmat emergency stops, and how it differs from ordinary parking decisions.