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How to calculate LTL freight class

Freight class (50–500) drives LTL pricing. Here is how density-based classes work and how to land the right one.

Last updated 6/3/2026

How to calculate LTL freight class

LTL pricing hinges on freight class — a number from 50 (dense, cheap) to 500 (light, expensive) set by the NMFC. Getting it right is the difference between a fair quote and a surprise re-bill.

The four factors

  1. Density (the big one) — pounds per cubic foot.
  2. Stowability — how easily it loads with other freight.
  3. Handling — fragility, special care.
  4. Liability — value and theft/damage risk.

For most commodities, density determines the class.

Calculate density in 3 steps

  1. Volume (cubic feet) = (L × W × H in inches) ÷ 1,728
  2. Density = weight (lb) ÷ volume (cu ft)
  3. Look up the class from the density:
Density (lb/cu ft)Typical class
50+50–55
30–3560–65
22.5–3070
15–22.577.5–85
12–1592.5–100
8–10125
6–8150
4–6175–200
under 1400–500

Worked example

A pallet 48 × 40 × 48 in weighing 600 lb:

  • Volume = (48 × 40 × 48) ÷ 1,728 = 53.3 cu ft
  • Density = 600 ÷ 53.3 = 11.3 lb/cu ft → roughly class 100

Tips

  • Measure the real footprint including the pallet and any overhang.
  • Round up dimensions — carriers re-measure and bill the higher number.
  • Some commodities have a fixed NMFC class regardless of density — verify yours.

How Atlas helps

Atlas estimates your class from the dimensions and weight you enter, and our ops team verifies it before booking so you don't get reclassified. Quote an LTL shipment.

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