HOS Trip Planning
HOS Trip Planning
Plan trips around driving limits, duty windows, breaks, weekly hours, sleeper options, restarts, and delay decisions.
HOS planning works best when it is treated as a trip constraint, not a paperwork problem. A load that looks possible by mileage can still be poor planning if the final parking option sits at the edge of the 14-hour window, the weekly hours are nearly exhausted, or the receiver has no overnight plan.
This section covers daily limits (11-hour driving, 14-hour window), weekly limits (60/70-hour), break and restart planning, split sleeper strategy, and less-discussed topics like the short-haul exemption and personal conveyance.
The common thread across all HOS planning is the same: the constraint is real before the trip starts, not after the driver is already committed and running short. Planning that treats hours as a ceiling rather than a budget protects both the driver and the dispatch relationship.
A conservative HOS plan asks
- What is the realistic average speed after traffic, grades, fuel, and stops?
- Where will the 30-minute break happen without wasting parking options?
- What is the last safe parking decision point before the clock is too tight?
- Does the appointment plan leave room for check-in, staging, detention, and a post-delivery parking move?
- How many cumulative weekly hours remain, and when will the 60 or 70-hour limit become the binding constraint?
- What is the plan if detention at the shipper or receiver consumes two or more hours of the available window?
The 14-hour window is the binding constraint on most days
Most planning conversations focus on the 11-hour driving limit, but the 14-hour duty window is usually what decides the day. The window starts the moment a driver goes on duty and runs continuously — through loading, waiting, fueling, breaks, and traffic. A driver who goes on duty at 7 AM and spends two hours at a shipper, one hour in traffic, and 30 minutes fueling has already used nearly a third of the 14-hour window before covering meaningful miles.
This is where planning decisions made at dispatch have downstream consequences the driver cannot recover. A plan that builds in no buffer for known on-duty activities is a plan that assumes everything goes right.
HOS daily and weekly limits at a glance
| Limit | What it controls | Planning implication | Most common failure mode |
|---|---|---|---|
| 11-hour driving limit | Maximum driving time after 10-hour off-duty period | Use 8–9 hours as a planning target; 11 is a ceiling, not a goal | Load plan built to maximize driving hours leaves no margin for stops |
| 14-hour duty window | Total window from first on-duty to final off-duty | Every non-driving activity eats from this window | Detention, loading, and fueling consume hours without adding miles |
| 30-minute break | Required after 8 hours of driving time | Place it where it supports route and parking, not just anywhere | Break forced at wrong location wastes best parking window |
| 60/70-hour weekly limit | Rolling 7- or 8-day cumulative on-duty hours | Track it mid-week, not only when the ELD warns | Driver accepts a multi-day load without checking remaining weekly hours |
HOS guides in this section
Start with the 14-hour clock article if your recurring problem is runs that look fine on the map but end with a tight parking search. Use the dispatcher HOS guide if your loads are frequently built around theoretical maximum hours rather than realistic available time. The 60/70-hour article is the right entry point if weekly limits are creating mid-week surprises on multi-day loads.
What is the difference between the 11-hour driving limit and the 14-hour duty window?
The 11-hour limit caps total driving time after a 10-hour off-duty period. The 14-hour window caps the entire duty period — from the moment the driver goes on duty until they must stop. Non-driving on-duty activities like loading, fueling, and waiting count against the 14-hour window but not the 11-hour driving limit. On most days, the 14-hour window runs out before the 11-hour driving limit does.
How should a dispatcher account for HOS when building a load plan?
A dispatcher should start with the driver's actual available hours — not the theoretical maximum — and subtract realistic time for all known on-duty activities: loading, check-in, fuel, breaks, traffic, and a parking search at the end of the day. A load plan that only works if every stop is instant and traffic is clear is not a viable plan.
When does the 60/70-hour weekly limit become a problem during a trip?
The weekly limit becomes a planning problem when a driver accepts a multi-day load late in the week without checking cumulative hours. A driver who is at 55 hours on a 7-day cycle on a Thursday has fewer than one full day's hours available — but that may not be visible on a per-day dispatch plan. The ELD shows it, but by the time it becomes a warning, the options are usually already narrowed.
Guides in this section
HOS Trip Planning
11-Hour Driving Limit Trip Planning
How to plan realistic driving time around the 11-hour driving limit.
HOS Trip Planning
14-Hour Clock Trip Planning
Why the duty window often controls the day more than mileage does.
HOS Trip Planning
30-Minute Break Planning for Truck Trips
How to place the break so it supports the trip instead of disrupting it.
HOS Trip Planning
Split Sleeper Berth Planning Basics
Planning considerations before using split sleeper berth time.
HOS Trip Planning
34-Hour Restart Trip Planning
How to plan a restart around parking, services, and the next dispatch.
HOS Trip Planning
Adverse Driving Conditions Trip Planning
How to think about delays, weather, traffic, and HOS without stretching the plan past safety.
HOS Trip Planning
Dispatcher HOS Planning Guide
How dispatchers can build load plans around realistic HOS limits rather than theoretical maximums, and why fragile schedules create downstream driver problems.
HOS Trip Planning
60/70-Hour Driving Limit Planning
How to plan around the weekly on-duty limit before it becomes a mid-week surprise.
HOS Trip Planning
Short-Haul Exemption Basics
When the short-haul HOS exemption may apply and the planning questions to ask before relying on it.
HOS Trip Planning
Personal Conveyance Planning Basics
How personal conveyance works in an HOS context and the planning questions to ask before using it.
HOS Trip Planning
Live Unload Trip Planning
How to protect HOS, parking, and ETA plans when a delivery requires live unload.
HOS Trip Planning
Team Driver Trip Planning
Planning notes for team-driver trips across HOS, handoffs, fuel, parking, and fatigue.