Checklists

Fuel Stop Planning Checklist

A driver checklist for fuel range, reserve, card rules, and reefer needs.

When to use this checklist

Use before the tank, reefer, payment rules, or next parking decision becomes urgent.

Before the trip

Fuel problems compound fastest when they collide with parking or HOS pressure. Working through these items before departure is what keeps a routine fuel stop from becoming the reason the day falls apart.

  • Record current fuel level, practical range, and reserve margin.
  • Confirm fuel card, network, discount type, or carrier fuel solution.
  • Check reefer fuel separately for temperature-controlled loads.
  • Confirm truck access, pump layout, and whether the stop helps or hurts parking.

During the trip

Range estimates made at dispatch don't account for grades, headwinds, extra idling, or a detour. Recheck these whenever actual conditions differ from what the fuel plan assumed.

  • Recheck range after wind, grades, traffic, detours, or idling.
  • Avoid pushing fuel so low that one closed pump changes the whole plan.
  • Keep receipts, odometer, and settlement details according to policy.

If the plan changes

A fuel decision that looks efficient in isolation can cost more when it burns the parking window or forces an off-route detour at the wrong hour. These steps apply whenever fuel and parking are no longer compatible.

  • If the planned stop no longer works, choose a stop that protects range first, then optimize cost.
  • If parking is tight, do not let a fuel stop consume the last workable parking window.
  • If reefer fuel is low, treat it as a load-risk issue and escalate early.

Red flags

Each of these represents a fuel situation where one thing going wrong tends to produce a second one. A plan that depends on everything working at the same late stop rarely survives contact with a full lot.

  • Fuel and parking both depend on the same late stop.
  • The chosen stop is off-route enough to affect HOS.
  • Payment method or discount rule is unknown.
  • Weather or grades reduce expected range.

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

  • Fuel reserve is below the planned margin before a remote, windy, mountainous, or congested segment.
  • The planned fuel stop would consume the only realistic parking window.
  • Reefer fuel, payment rules, or card acceptance is unresolved before the load depends on it.

Fuel and parking conflict worksheet

Use this when the best fuel stop and the best parking stop are not the same place. A fuel decision that burns the parking window can cost more than it saves.

ChoiceFuel resultParking resultDecision
Fuel now, park later
Park first, fuel in the morning
Use a higher-cost on-route fuel stop
Split tractor fuel / reefer fuel / DEF into separate stops

Fuel stop details to write down

DetailWrite-in valueWhy it matters
Card or network ruleAvoids surprises at the pump or in settlement.
Expected gallons and reserve after stopShows whether the next segment has margin.
DEF, reefer fuel, or trailer access needPrevents a second stop caused by missing services.
Exit, re-entry, and parking impactKeeps a fuel stop from damaging the schedule.

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

Fuel decision rule

If the fuel stop threatens the parking plan, rebuild both together. A fuel stop that looks efficient on paper can become expensive if it forces a late parking search, adds a difficult exit, or leaves the driver with no useful backup.

For reefer, DEF, or special equipment needs, write the service requirement beside the fuel stop. A stop that handles tractor diesel but misses reefer fuel or DEF is not a complete fuel plan for that trip.

Last reviewed

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