🗓️ Last updated: June 2026·User-input estimate · CAD · no government rates
🍁 Canada Tool

🇨🇦 Canadian Round-Trip / Backhaul Lane Profitability Calculator

See whether a full lane makes money — not just one load. Combine your outbound load, return or backhaul load, and all deadhead into a single lane P&L in CAD. User-input math only, no CRA, IFTA, or government rates.

Single-load calculator vs. Lane calculator — what's the difference?
The Load Profitability Calculator evaluates one load in one direction.
This tool evaluates the full lane — outbound load + return/backhaul load + all deadhead — combined into one P&L. Use this when deciding whether a lane is worth running regularly, or whether a backhaul makes a weak outbound viable.
🔼 Outbound Leg (CAD)
Total revenue for the outbound load — linehaul, fuel surcharge, and accessorials combined.
Driver/owner pay, per-km variable costs, allocated fixed costs, tolls, permits — everything except fuel.
Diesel cost for the outbound leg only.
🛣️ Outbound Distance — optional
Paid kilometres on the outbound leg.
Empty kilometres driven to reach the outbound pickup.
🔽 Return / Backhaul Leg (CAD)
Revenue for the return or backhaul load. Enter 0 if running back empty.
Operating costs for the return leg — pay, variable costs, tolls, etc. — excluding fuel.
Diesel cost for the return leg only.
🛣️ Return Distance — optional
Paid kilometres on the return leg. Enter 0 if returning empty.
Empty kilometres after the return dropoff before the next load.
⚙️ Lane-Level Costs (CAD)
Percent of combined outbound and return gross revenue — or switch to $ flat for the lane. Leave at 0 if no dispatcher.
If you factor these loads, enter the fee as a percent of total gross. Leave at 0 if not applicable.
Any other lane-level cost not already included above.
Net Lane Profit
CAD
total lane gross minus all costs, based on the numbers you entered
Lane Margin
net profit as a share of total gross revenue
Total Lane Gross
Total Lane Costs
Revenue / Loaded KM
Cost / Loaded KM
Profit / Loaded KM
Profit / Total KM
Outbound Net
Return Net
Deadhead Ratio
Dispatcher Fee
Factoring Fee
Total Loaded KM
📄 Lane Breakdown
Planning estimate only — not financial, tax, accounting, or legal advice. This tool does not calculate income taxes, GST/HST, CRA obligations, IFTA, or any government fee or rate. All figures are based on the amounts you enter. Verify all costs and revenue with your records and accountant.
Advertisement — 728×90

How round-trip lane profitability is calculated

A single load tells you whether one leg makes money. A lane tells you whether the whole trip is worth it. The outbound load may pay well but require a long deadhead to get there. The backhaul may be cheap but enough to cover the cost of getting home. This calculator combines both legs — revenue, operating costs, fuel, and all deadhead — into one lane P&L in CAD so you can see the complete picture before committing to a lane.

Lane-level costs like the dispatcher fee and factoring fee are applied to the combined gross revenue from both legs, because that is how they are typically charged. The result cards show both the per-leg net contribution (how much each direction made or lost independently) and the full lane metrics (profit per loaded km, deadhead ratio, total gross). All figures come from the numbers you enter — nothing is hardcoded.

FigureFormula
Total gross revenueoutbound revenue + return revenue
Dispatcher fee (% mode)total gross × dispatcher % ÷ 100
Dispatcher fee ($ mode)entered flat CAD amount
Factoring feetotal gross × factoring % ÷ 100 (if entered)
Total lane costsoutbound operating + outbound fuel + return operating + return fuel + dispatcher fee + factoring fee + other costs
Net lane profittotal gross − total lane costs
Lane marginnet lane profit ÷ total gross × 100
Total loaded kmoutbound loaded km + return loaded km
Total deadhead kmoutbound deadhead + return deadhead
Total kmtotal loaded km + total deadhead km
Revenue / loaded kmtotal gross ÷ total loaded km
Cost / loaded kmtotal costs ÷ total loaded km
Profit / loaded kmnet lane profit ÷ total loaded km
Profit / total kmnet lane profit ÷ total km
Deadhead ratiototal deadhead ÷ total km × 100
Outbound net (standalone)outbound revenue − outbound operating − outbound fuel
Return net (standalone)return revenue − return operating − return fuel

The outbound and return net figures show each leg's contribution before lane-level costs. A backhaul that looks marginal on its own may still be the right move if it reduces deadhead and lowers the lane's overall cost per km. Conversely, a return leg that loses money on its own can drag a strong outbound into a loss lane once all costs are combined.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is this different from the Load Profitability Calculator?
The Load Profitability Calculator evaluates a single load in one direction. This Round-Trip / Backhaul Lane calculator combines both directions — outbound load, return or backhaul load, and all deadhead kilometres — into one lane P&L. That is the right unit of analysis when deciding whether a lane is worth running regularly, because a strong outbound can carry a weak backhaul, or a cheap backhaul can make an otherwise marginal outbound worthwhile.
What if I run empty on the return leg?
Set the Return Load Revenue to zero and enter your return operating and fuel costs. The calculator will include those costs in the lane total, which shows the true cost of running back empty. The lane P&L will reflect that the outbound load must cover all return costs on its own.
How is the deadhead ratio calculated?
Deadhead ratio is the total empty kilometres — outbound deadhead to pickup plus return deadhead after dropoff — divided by total lane kilometres, expressed as a percentage. Lower is better — every deadhead kilometre costs money without earning any revenue.
Does this tool use CRA, IFTA, fuel tax, or government rates?
No. Every figure in this tool comes from the numbers you enter. No CRA allowance rates, IFTA fuel tax, GST/HST, federal fuel charge, carbon pricing, or provincial compliance rates are applied or hardcoded. Enter your own actual costs including any tax or levy you track separately.
Should I include the dispatcher fee at the lane level?
Yes — if your dispatcher charges a percentage of total gross, apply it at the lane level so it covers both legs. Enter the percentage and the calculator applies it to the combined outbound and return revenue. If you pay a flat fee per lane, switch to $ flat and enter the amount.

Running the same lanes week after week?

QuicklyFig is building Canadian trucking and freight tools. Free to calculate. Pro to save your lane models and compare profitability across routes in your Owner-Operator Command.

Join the waitlist