Trucking Companies in Maryland

454 Cities
20,412 Active Companies
20,412
Active Companies
1.6% of U.S. total
656,846
Active Power Units
reported by 18,944 carriers
2,152 +1.3%
New Registrations (12 mo)
vs. 2,124 prior 12 months
65.4%
Owner-Operator Share
of carriers reporting fleet size
What stands out
  • The average fleet here runs 34.7 units, well above the U.S. average of 13.1.
Maryland is home to more than 20,000 active trucking companies and serves as a critical transportation hub in the Mid-Atlantic region. Its strategic location between the Northeast and the South provides carriers with direct access to major consumer markets, manufacturing centers, ports, and distribution facilities. The state's extensive highway network, intermodal infrastructure, and proximity to Washington, D.C., make Maryland an essential part of regional and interstate freight transportation. The trucking industry in Maryland supports a wide range of economic sectors, including healthcare, biotechnology, aerospace, food processing, manufacturing, retail distribution, construction, and international trade. Thousands of shipments move through the state each day, connecting local businesses with customers throughout the United States and Canada. Several major Interstate highways form the backbone of Maryland's freight network. Interstate 95 is the state's primary north-south transportation corridor, linking Baltimore with Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, New York City, and the southeastern United States. Other important freight routes include I-70, I-68, I-81, I-83, I-97, I-195, I-270, and the Capital Beltway (I-495), providing efficient access to regional distribution centers and neighboring states. One of Maryland's greatest logistics assets is the Port of Baltimore, one of the busiest ports on the U.S. East Coast. The port handles a diverse mix of cargo, including automobiles, construction equipment, agricultural machinery, forest products, steel, containers, and bulk commodities. Combined with nearby rail terminals and warehousing facilities, the port plays a vital role in domestic and international supply chains. Baltimore also serves as one of the region's largest logistics and distribution centers. Additional freight activity is concentrated in cities such as Frederick, Hagerstown, Cumberland, Salisbury, Annapolis, and surrounding metropolitan areas. The state's proximity to major population centers allows trucking companies to provide efficient same-day and next-day freight services throughout much of the eastern United States. Maryland carriers transport a wide variety of cargo, including general freight, refrigerated food products, beverages, pharmaceuticals, construction materials, machinery, chemicals, automobiles, retail merchandise, and intermodal containers. Both owner-operators and large commercial fleets operate throughout the state, serving local, regional, and long-haul markets. TruckCarrierHub makes it easy to find trucking companies operating throughout Maryland. You can search by company name, city, USDOT number, MC number, cargo type, fleet size, or operating authority. Company profiles include important business information, helping shippers, brokers, carriers, and drivers quickly identify transportation providers that best match their shipping requirements throughout Maryland and across North America.

Cities & towns in Maryland

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
C Cities and towns
M Cities and towns
S Cities and towns