Checklists

Dispatcher Trip Planning Checklist (Printable)

A printable worksheet for dispatchers covering HOS, appointment timing, parking, and escalation triggers before committing to a load.

When to use this checklist

Use before confirming a load, appointment, relay, detention update, or tight same-day delivery plan.

Before the trip

A dispatcher's plan is only as good as the information it's built on. Each of these items turns a hopeful estimate into something the driver can actually use when loading runs long or traffic builds.

  • Review the driver's available hours before promising timing.
  • Add time for loading, unloading, scale, fuel, break, food, parking, and communication.
  • Ask where the driver can stop before and after the customer.
  • Check whether weather or metro timing makes the appointment fragile.

During the trip

The driver's situation changes through the day. These are the questions that keep the dispatcher's version of the trip matching what's actually happening on the road.

  • Reset the plan after shipper delay, traffic, weather, or parking changes.
  • Give the driver a clear decision point instead of a vague instruction to keep going.
  • Tell customer service early when the plan no longer supports the original ETA.

If the plan changes

When a delivery or parking plan falls apart, the job is to build the next one — not to preserve the logic of the original while the driver runs out of options.

  • When the clock tightens, protect a legal and practical stop before chasing the appointment.
  • When parking changes, update ETA and next-load expectations.
  • When detention happens, rebuild HOS and parking together.

Red flags

These planning assumptions appear most often in loads that end with a problem call at 9 PM. Catching them in the planning window rather than after the truck is moving is the whole point.

  • ETA assumes perfect traffic and instant loading.
  • Receiver parking is unknown.
  • Driver has no backup before the final market.
  • Weather or enforcement delay would make the plan fail.

Trip snapshot worksheet

Fill this out before the truck is under time pressure. If one line is unknown, mark who will verify it and by what time.

FieldWrite-in valueVerified by / time
Driver / truck / trailer
Load, commodity, or special handling note
Pickup and delivery windows
Current HOS and next break need
Fuel, DEF, or reefer status
Weather, road, or metro concern
Customer staging or parking rule

Plan A / Plan B / Plan C worksheet

Write the backup plan before the first option fails. A useful backup has a decision time, not just a place name.

PlanStop or actionLatest decision timeWho confirmsNotes
Plan A
Plan B
Plan C / early stop
Stop-search cutoff

Decision log

Use this section when dispatch, the driver, weather, parking, fuel, or the customer changes the plan.

TimeTriggerDecision madeWho was updatedNext check

Escalation triggers

  • The plan relies on maximum legal hours with no room for loading, check-in, fuel, traffic, or parking.
  • The driver reports a delay but no new stop, ETA, or customer update has been set.
  • The load requires customer communication before the driver runs out of practical options.

Load acceptance screen

Before saying yesCheckNotes
Appointment realityPickup, delivery, check-in cutoff, and detention risk are known.
Driver clockCurrent HOS and weekly hours support the load plus delay margin.
Parking planEnd-of-day stop and backup are named before dispatch.
Weather and corridor riskKnown weather, metro, grade, or inspection pressure is included.

Driver update prompts

These prompts keep dispatch from asking only for location. The better question is whether the plan still works.

  • After loading: did loading time change the fuel, break, or parking plan?
  • Before final fuel: does the fuel stop still support the parking window?
  • Before metro approach: are we crossing, staging, or stopping short?
  • After receiver delay begins: what time do we rebuild the plan?

Notes field

Print this page and write the current load, route, clock, fuel, weather, customer, and parking notes below. Leave enough room to rewrite the plan when one assumption changes.

Planning itemCurrent noteUpdate or decision time
Primary stop
Backup stop
Fuel or reefer issue
Weather / road concern
Customer or dispatch update

Dispatcher review habit

Before ending a dispatch call, repeat the next decision point back to the driver: where the truck is headed, what time the plan changes, and who will communicate with the customer if the window slips. This short repeat-back catches most misunderstandings before the truck is moving.

After delivery, compare the planned trigger times with what actually happened. If the driver switched parking late, fueled under pressure, or waited too long to update the customer, adjust the next dispatch template.

Last reviewed

2026-05-27. Review again when carrier policy, official guidance, or customer requirements change.