Build a Cost-Effective Fleet That Meets Your Needs
Owning equipment can provide control, reliability and long-term cost stability, but it also requires careful planning. Too much owned equipment ties up capital and can increase the amount of time equipment sits idle, but having too little can limit flexibility and growth.
Used trucks offer a practical way to strike that balance by allowing fleets to build and adjust their owned capacity at a lower cost and providing greater flexibility and less financial risk than purchasing new equipment.
Fill Capacity Gaps Without Over-Investing
Used trucks allow fleets to add equipment at a lower cost than new units. They also make it possible to add capacity incrementally, target specific operational needs and the fleet’s makeup over time. For fleets focused on rightsizing their owned assets, used trucks provide a cost-effective way to fill specific gaps, build a reliable foundation and adjust the fleet as business needs change.
Add Capacity Based on the Fleet’s Timeline, Not the Market’s
New equipment isn’t always readily available. It can be subject to production cycles, order backlogs and build slot availability. When a fleet needs to add capacity quickly, waiting months for new trucks may not be an option.
Used trucks are often available for immediate deployment, allowing fleets to respond quickly to demand changes, avoid turning away freight and reduce strain on existing equipment. Aligning acquisition timing with business needs rather than manufacturing cycles can increase flexibility. Plus, used trucks are available across a wide range of classes, configurations and applications, making it easier for fleets to match equipment to their operational requirements.
Ownership also allows fleets to control when equipment is replaced. They can base decisions on maintenance trends, utilization levels and specific needs rather than external factors.
Build an Accurate Foundation Fleet
Fleets that prefer owned equipment can size it to match the most consistent capacity needs and then supplement with leases or rentals. Many fleets use a combination of owned, leased and rented equipment. The 2025 National Private Truck Council’s Benchmarking Survey found that 45% of fleets reported owning 90% or more of their heavy-duty power equipment, compared to 38% last year. The percentage that leases held steady at 28%, while 27% use a combination of leasing and ownership.
For fleets that manage owned equipment, the Life Cycle Extension Calculator can help evaluate the financial impact of keeping trucks longer before replacement. The tool works by spreading the total fleet acquisition cost across a longer replacement window. For example, a 50-unit fleet with an average asset value of $150,000 per unit carries a total fleet cost of $7.5 million. At a five-year trade cycle, that equates to $1.5 million in average annual spend. Extending the cycle to six years reduces that figure to $1.25 million annually, improving cash flow by $250,000 per year. Fleets can use that analysis to make a more informed decision about when to replace equipment versus when to hold it and whether buying used trucks to fill gaps makes more financial sense than purchasing new.
Penske Used Trucks offers a wide selection of trucks and trailers. Most equipment is owned and maintained by Penske, so buyers benefit from well-maintained equipment with detailed condition reports. Penske also works with fleets to evaluate historical, current and projected routes and volumes to determine the optimal fleet size and asset mix.
In addition to used truck sales, Penske provides leasing, rental and logistics services to give fleets and shippers the flexibility to adapt as their needs change.
Looking for more information on rightsizing?