Freight Shipping from Atlanta to Seattle

2,832 miles51 hrs transitRates in 15 Minutes

Ship freight from Atlanta, GA to Seattle, WA with FMCSA-verified carriers. FTL from $6,089-$7,505, LTL from $1,758-$2,807. No hidden fees, no re-bills.

Distance

2,832 mi

Drive Time

51 hrs

FTL Rate Est.

$6,089-$7,505

LTL Rate Est.

$1,758-$2,807

Auto Manufacturing Corridor

AtlantaSeattle Lane Market Snapshot

Capacity: Tight

Active Carriers

91105

running this lane

Weekly Loads

229247

typical volume

Rate / Mile

$2.15$2.67

dry van spot

Backhaul Score

71/100

Strong

High-demand corridor. Spot rates move quickly during peak weeks. Contract lanes typically lock in 8-12% below spot.

Toll Estimate

$45–$75 one-way passing through GA, WA, TN, KY, OH, IN, IL, MO, AR, OK, NM. 7 typical fuel stops along the corridor.

Book For Best Rates

Best pickup days: Tue, Wed, Thu. Avoid: Sun, Fri PM, Mon AM. Mid-week pickups on this lane typically price 6-11% below weekend-adjacent bookings.

Atlanta to Seattle Freight Corridor

Atlanta is the freight crossroads of the Southeast and arguably the most balanced truck market in the country. The convergence of I-75, I-85, and I-20 creates a natural hub where carriers can find loads heading in virtually any direction within hours. UPS and The Home Depot both headquarter their logistics operations here, contributing to a freight ecosystem so dense that the metro has more warehouse space than most states. Norfolk Southern and CSX both maintain major intermodal operations, making Atlanta the rail freight capital of the Southeast.

Seattle is the Pacific Northwest's freight powerhouse, combining one of the nation's largest container ports with the headquarters of Amazon, Boeing, Microsoft, and Costco. The Northwest Seaport Alliance (Seattle + Tacoma) is the fourth-largest container gateway in North America, funneling Asian imports into the U.S. interior via BNSF and Union Pacific rail. Amazon's explosive last-mile network has transformed the region's freight landscape, with dozens of delivery stations and fulfillment centers scattered across the Puget Sound.

The Atlanta-to-Seattle corridor spans 2,832 miles via I-75, I-85, I-5, I-90. This lane connects logistics & distribution and film & entertainment freight from the Atlanta market to technology and aerospace (boeing) demand in Seattle. Carriers running this route regularly maintain competitive rates through strong backhaul availability in both directions.

What Ships from Atlanta

Atlanta's economy is driven by logistics & distribution, film & entertainment, financial technology, generating consistent outbound freight demand.

automobiles (Kia)

poultry products

soft drinks & beverages

carpet & flooring

film equipment

packaged foods

What Seattle Receives

Seattle's technology, aerospace (boeing), e-commerce (amazon) sectors drive strong inbound freight demand from markets like Atlanta.

containerized imports (Asia)

consumer electronics

automotive vehicles

construction materials

industrial machinery

food & beverage

Recommended Equipment

Based on the commodities moving between Atlanta and Seattle, these equipment types best serve this corridor.

Dry Van (FTL)

Ideal for palletized consumer goods, electronics, packaged foods, and general merchandise. Enclosed protection from weather and theft.

$6,089-$7,505 estimated for this lane

Refrigerated (Reefer)

Required for temperature-sensitive freight including fresh produce, dairy, frozen foods, pharmaceuticals, and beverages. Maintains precise temperature control throughout transit.

$7,505-$9,487 estimated for this lane

Flatbed

Best for steel, lumber, machinery, building materials, and oversized loads that cannot be palletized or loaded through standard dock doors.

$8,071-$10,337 estimated for this lane

LTL (Less Than Truckload)

Cost-effective for shipments under 10,000 lbs or fewer than 10 pallets. Shared trailer space with other shippers reduces cost for smaller loads.

$1,758-$2,807 estimated for this lane

Rate Estimates by Shipping Mode

Estimated rates for the Atlanta to Seattle lane (2,832 miles). Actual rates depend on commodity, weight, season, and equipment.

ModeRate EstimateTransit
FTL (Full Truckload)$6,089-$7,50551 hrs
LTL (Less Than Truckload)$1,758-$2,80753-55 days
Expedited / Hot Shot$9,204-$12,74434 hrs
Intermodal (Rail + Truck)$3,823-$5,23954-56 days

Major Shippers on This Corridor

Key freight generators in both Atlanta and Seattle that drive volume on this lane.

The Home Depot (HQ)

UPS (HQ)

Coca-Cola (HQ)

Amazon (HQ)

Boeing Everett/Renton

Microsoft (Redmond)

Shipping Tips for Atlanta to Seattle

Atlanta Seasonal Advisory

Home improvement freight (Home Depot's supply chain) peaks March through June. Carpet shipments from the Dalton mills 90 miles north run heaviest in spring and fall. Coca-Cola distribution spikes ahead of summer and holiday seasons.

Seattle Seasonal Advisory

Port volumes peak July-October as retailers stock for holidays. Apple and cherry harvest (July-September) from eastern Washington creates heavy reefer demand. Boeing production schedules drive oversized and flatbed freight year-round. Amazon Q4 surge (October-December) is the single largest seasonal freight event in the region.

Consider Team Drivers

At 2,832 miles, this route exceeds single-driver HOS limits. Team drivers can deliver in 51 hours without mandatory 10-hour rest breaks, cutting transit time nearly in half compared to a solo driver.

Book Early for Best Rates

Spot market rates fluctuate daily. Booking 3-5 days in advance typically saves 10-15% compared to same-day or next-day freight requests. For recurring shipments, ask about contract rates.

Logistics Infrastructure

How freight actually flows in and out of Atlanta and Seattle — the warehouses, rail terminals, and highway spines that shape rates on this lane.

Origin

Atlanta, GA

Tier 1
Metro Population
6.1M metro
Avg Outbound Rate
$2.20-$2.55/mi
Key Highways
I-75, I-85, I-20
Rail / Intermodal
NS Inman Yard; CSX Fairburn Intermodal; NS Austell Intermodal
Warehouse Districts
South Atlanta/I-75 (McDonough/Locust Grove), West Atlanta/I-20 (Douglasville/Lithia Springs), Northeast/I-85 (Braselton/Jefferson)

Atlanta's I-285 perimeter loop is the single most important freight route in the Southeast. Carriers who understand the clockwise vs. counterclockwise traffic patterns and time their crosstown runs to avoid the I-285/I-85 Spaghetti Junction can save 45-90 minutes per delivery.

Destination

Seattle, WA

Tier 1
Metro Population
4.0M metro
Avg Outbound Rate
$2.15-$2.55/mi
Key Highways
I-5, I-90, I-405
Rail / Intermodal
BNSF Seattle International Gateway; Union Pacific Argo Yard; Port of Seattle Terminal 18
Port Access
Port of Seattle / Northwest Seaport Alliance (0 mi)
Warehouse Districts
Kent Valley/I-5 South, SoDo/Harbor Island, Sumner/I-167

Seattle's chronic truck driver shortage — driven by sky-high cost of living — means carriers willing to base here command premium rates. The I-5 corridor between Seattle and Portland is one of the most consistently high-paying lanes on the West Coast, especially for reefer loads of Pacific Northwest produce.

Return Loads from Seattle

Seattle generates consistent outbound volume. Backhaul to Atlanta is generally available within 2-3 days at 65-78% of forward rate.

Top Backhaul Commodities from Seattle

aircraft & aerospace partssoftware/cloud hardwareseafood (Alaska processing)agricultural exports (wheat, apples)forest productse-commerce shipments

Seasonal Rate Patterns

  • Oct-Dec (retail peak)

    +15-22% on dry van, book 2+ weeks out

  • Jul (auto shutdown)

    -8-12% available capacity, predictable

  • Mar-Oct (construction season)

    +8-14% on flatbed

Atlanta to Seattle Freight FAQs

How much does it cost to ship freight from Atlanta to Seattle?

Full truckload (FTL) rates from Atlanta, GA to Seattle, WA currently range $6,089-$7,505 (roughly $2.15-$2.67 per mile over 2,832 miles). LTL shipments typically cost $1,758-$2,807 depending on freight class, weight, and dimensions. Capacity is currently tight on this corridor, so booking 3-5 days out locks in the best pricing. Request a custom quote for exact rates.

How long does freight take from Atlanta to Seattle?

Standard FTL transit from Atlanta to Seattle is approximately 51 hrs by truck over 2,832 miles, with 7 typical fuel stops along the corridor. LTL shipments add 2-4 business days due to terminal transfers. Expedited service with team drivers can reduce FTL transit by up to 40%. Intermodal rail-truck service via NS Inman Yard to BNSF Seattle International Gateway takes 5-7 days but offers significant cost savings.

What equipment do I need for Atlanta to Seattle freight?

Equipment choice depends on your commodity. Atlanta commonly ships automobiles (Kia), poultry products, soft drinks & beverages, which typically moves in standard dry van trailers. Seattle commonly receives containerized imports (Asia), consumer electronics, automotive vehicles. Our team matches you with the right equipment type for your specific freight.

Is there good backhaul from Seattle to Atlanta?

Strong backhaul (scored 71/100 based on Seattle's outbound commodity mix). Seattle generates consistent outbound volume. Backhaul to Atlanta is generally available within 2-3 days at 65-78% of forward rate. Seattle's top outbound commodities — aircraft & aerospace parts, software/cloud hardware, seafood (Alaska processing) — are the most common return-load categories carriers target.

What commodities move from Atlanta to Seattle?

The Atlanta-to-Seattle corridor handles a diverse freight mix — freight brokers often call this the Auto Manufacturing Corridor. Atlanta's top outbound commodities include automobiles (Kia), poultry products, soft drinks & beverages, carpet & flooring, film equipment, packaged foods. Seattle's primary inbound freight includes containerized imports (Asia), consumer electronics, automotive vehicles, construction materials, industrial machinery, food & beverage. Industries driving this lane include logistics & distribution and film & entertainment from Atlanta and technology and aerospace (Boeing) in Seattle.

What tolls should I expect on the Atlanta to Seattle route?

Expect roughly $45-$75 in tolls round-trip passing through GA, WA, TN, KY, OH, IN, IL, MO, AR, OK, NM. Most rate quotes either include tolls in the line-haul or bill them as a separate pass-through — ask your dispatcher to confirm which model applies to your lane.

When are rates highest on the Atlanta to Seattle lane?

This lane's rate cycle is tied to logistics & distribution and film & entertainment cycles. Key periods: Oct-Dec (retail peak) (+15-22% on dry van, book 2+ weeks out); Jul (auto shutdown) (-8-12% available capacity, predictable); Mar-Oct (construction season) (+8-14% on flatbed). For the lowest spot rates, ship mid-week (Tue, Wed, Thu) and avoid Sun, Fri PM, Mon AM pickups when possible.

Should I use team drivers for the Atlanta to Seattle lane?

At 2,832 miles, this route exceeds a solo driver's hours-of-service limits and requires at least one 10-hour break, adding roughly 14-18 hours to transit. Team drivers typically deliver in 30-37 hours — nearly half the solo transit — at a 20-35% rate premium. For time-critical freight over 1,200 miles, teams generally pay for themselves.

Get Exact Rates for Atlanta to Seattle

We maintain working relationships with 91+ FMCSA-verified carriers running the AtlantaSeattle corridor. Tell us about your freight and we will match you with one that fits your commodity, timing, and budget. Free quote, no obligation.

Mon-Fri 7AM-7PM CT | No obligation, no contracts

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