Corridor Guides

I-70 Truck Trip Planning Guide

Planning notes for I-70 truck trips across grades, winter weather, metro markets, and timing.

Corridor overview

I-70 crosses the Rocky Mountains, the Great Plains, and the Rust Belt manufacturing corridor in approximately 2,150 miles. The Colorado mountain segment — including grades above 11,000 feet — is the most weather-sensitive and time-sensitive section of any major interstate freight corridor in the country.

This page is not navigation, route approval, low-clearance routing, hazmat routing, or current weather-based routing. It is a planning framework for deciding what to check before the truck is committed.

Planning segments

SegmentWhy it mattersPlanning concernConservative planning habitSource note
Midwest plainsWind, storms, and open stretches can affect light or empty equipment.Fuel and parking should not be pushed into a weather window.Choose a conservative stop before conditions worsen.Use NWS wind and severe weather resources.
Denver approachMetro timing and elevation changes can compress the schedule.Parking can tighten before mountain decisions.Treat Denver as a planning boundary, not just another city.Use official state traveler information.
Mountain grade sectionsGrades, winter controls, and closures can affect truck timing.Route approval and equipment readiness are critical.Verify commercial route tools, official conditions, and carrier policy before committing.Use official traveler and weather resources.
Winter closure risk areasHigh-elevation weather can stop or slow the day.A late decision may leave no comfortable parking option.Carry a lower-elevation backup and communicate delay risk early.Use NWS and state resources.

I-70 corridor planning notes

  • The Colorado mountain segment (Eisenhower/Johnson Tunnel at 11,000 feet, Vail Pass, Glenwood Canyon) is the most weather-sensitive part of this corridor — plan both directions independently and keep a lower-elevation backup whenever conditions are uncertain.
  • Mandatory brake checks and chain-law enforcement near Colorado grades can add 30 to 90 minutes to a day that looks manageable on paper.
  • Denver-area traffic can approach Chicago-level delays on weekday afternoons — treat the Denver approach as a planning boundary requiring its own stop decision.
  • Kansas and Missouri plains wind frequently affects empty and high-profile equipment, with limited shelter options on open stretches.

HOS and fuel cautions for this corridor

  • Mountain grades reduce fuel economy by 30 to 50 percent — fuel on the eastern side of any major Colorado pass, not after.
  • Altitude and temperature can affect engine performance at high elevations; some engines require additional consideration before long descents.
  • Kansas and Missouri distances between services are manageable but plan fuel before any weather-delayed or grade segment.

Late-day decision example

Use this as a dispatch conversation prompt, not as route instruction. The goal is to make the stop-or-continue decision while the driver still has practical choices.

SetupDecision pointConservative moveDispatcher prompt
A driver approaches a mountain, plains-wind, or major metro section late in the day after loading or construction delay.Before the next grade, exposed stretch, or metro approach, decide whether the truck still has enough margin to continue safely and legally.Use an earlier staging stop when the remaining plan assumes normal speed through terrain, weather, or congestion.Where can the driver stop before the route becomes slower, darker, or more exposed?

Official resources

  • Use National Weather Service resources for weather education and alerts.
  • Use current state traveler information and carrier-approved truck routing tools for current road, restriction, and closure decisions.
  • Use FMCSA and ELD records for HOS decisions.

State-by-state planning resources

Use these official planning resources as checkpoints for corridor research. They do not make this page a route planner, live closure service, truck-legal route, or low-clearance tool.

StatePlanning useOfficial sourcesCaveat
PennsylvaniaWestern Pennsylvania approach conditions, winter exposure, and commercial vehicle planning context.penndot511, paCommercialVehiclesCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
OhioOhio travel conditions and major interchange timing.ohgoCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
IndianaIndianapolis-area and cross-state traveler-information planning.indotTrafficwiseCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
IllinoisMetro-east and Illinois traveler-information planning.idotTravelCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
MissouriSt. Louis, central Missouri, construction, and traveler-information planning.modotTravelerCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
KansasPlains wind, winter exposure, and rural-distance planning.kandriveCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.
ColoradoDenver approach, mountain weather, closures, chain-law context, and grade exposure.coTripCheck official resources before departure and again during legal stops; this guide is not a live routing or restriction service.