484220 Specialized Freight (except Used Goods) Trucking, Local
6-digit U.S. detail
484220

Specialized Freight (except Used Goods) Trucking, Local

Description

This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in providing local, specialized trucking. Local trucking establishments provide trucking within a metropolitan area that may cross state lines. Generally the trips are same-day return. Illustrative Examples: Local agricultural products trucking Local dump trucking (e.g., gravel, sand, top-soil) Local boat hauling Local livestock trucking Local bulk liquids trucking

Hierarchy

CodeTitleDescription
48
Transportation and Warehousing
2-digit sector
The Sector as a Whole The Transportation and Warehousing sector includes industries providing transportation of passengers and cargo, warehousing and storage for goods, scenic and sightseeing transportation, and support activities related to modes of transportation. Establishments in these industries use transportation equipment or transportation-related facilities as a productive asset. The type of equipment depends on the mode of transportation. The modes of transportation are air, rail, water, road, and pipeline. The Transportation and Warehousing sector distinguishes three basic types of activities: subsectors for each mode of transportation, a subsector for warehousing and storage, and a subsector for establishments providing support activities for transportation. In addition, there are subsectors for establishments that provide passenger transportation for scenic and sightseeing purposes, postal services, and courier services. A separate subsector for support activities is established in the sector because, first, support activities for transportation are inherently multimodal, such as freight transportation arrangement, or have multimodal aspects. Secondly, there are production process similarities among the support activity industries. One of the support activities identified in the Support Activities for Transportation subsector is the routine repair and maintenance of transportation equipment (e.g., aircraft at an airport, railroad rolling stock at a railroad terminal, or ships at a harbor or port facility). Such establishments do not perform complete overhauling or rebuilding of transportation equipment (i.e., periodic restoration of transportation equipment to original design specifications) or transportation equipment conversion (i.e., major modification to systems). An establishment that primarily performs factory (or shipyard) overhauls, rebuilding, or conversions of aircraft, railroad rolling stock, or ships is classified in Subsector 336, Transportation Equipment Manufacturing, according to the type of equipment. Many of the establishments in this sector often operate on networks, with physical facilities, labor forces, and equipment spread over an extensive geographic area. Warehousing establishments in this sector are distinguished from merchant wholesaling in that the warehouse establishments do not sell the goods. Excluded from this sector are establishments primarily engaged in providing travel agent, travel arrangement, and reservation services that support transportation establishments, hotels, other businesses, and government agencies. These establishments are classified in Sector 56, Administrative and Support and Waste Management and Remediation Services. Establishments primarily engaged in providing rental and leasing of transportation equipment without operator are classified in Subsector 532, Rental and Leasing Services. Establishments primarily engaged in providing medical care with transportation are classified in Sector 62, Health Care and Social Assistance.
484
Truck Transportation
3-digit subsector
Industries in the Truck Transportation subsector provide over-the-road transportation of cargo using motor vehicles, such as trucks and tractor trailers. The subsector is subdivided into general freight trucking and specialized freight trucking. This distinction reflects differences in equipment used, type of load carried, scheduling, terminal, and other networking services. General freight transportation establishments handle a wide variety of general commodities, generally palletized, and transported in a container or van trailer. Specialized freight transportation is the transportation of cargo that, because of size, weight, shape, or other inherent characteristics, requires specialized equipment for transportation. Each of these industry groups is further subdivided based on distance traveled. Local trucking establishments primarily carry goods within a single metropolitan area and its adjacent nonurban areas. Long-distance trucking establishments carry goods between metropolitan areas. The Specialized Freight Trucking industry group includes a separate industry for Used Household and Office Goods Moving. The household and office goods movers are separated because of the substantial network of establishments that has developed to deal with local and long-distance moving and the associated storage. In this area, the same establishment provides both local and long-distance services, while other specialized freight establishments generally limit their services to either local or long-distance hauling.
4842
Specialized Freight Trucking
4-digit industry group
This industry group comprises establishments primarily engaged in providing local or long-distance specialized freight trucking. The establishments of this industry are primarily engaged in the transportation of freight which, because of size, weight, shape, or other inherent characteristics, requires specialized equipment, such as flatbeds, tankers, or refrigerated trailers. This industry includes the transportation of used household, institutional, and commercial furniture and equipment.
48422
Specialized Freight (except Used Goods) Trucking, Local
5-digit NAICS industry
See industry description for 484220.
484220
Specialized Freight (except Used Goods) Trucking, Local
6-digit U.S. detail
This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in providing local, specialized trucking. Local trucking establishments provide trucking within a metropolitan area that may cross state lines. Generally the trips are same-day return. Illustrative Examples: Local agricultural products trucking Local dump trucking (e.g., gravel, sand, top-soil) Local boat hauling Local livestock trucking Local bulk liquids trucking

Need a supply chain stack that maps to this industry?

Use this NAICS classification as the starting point, then connect it to Item workflows across inventory, warehousing, order management, fulfillment, and transportation.

Classification References

  1. 01Providing long-distance specialized freight (except used goods) trucking including all North American international travel--are classified in Industry 484230, Specialized Freight (except Used Goods) Trucking, Long-Distance;
  2. 02Providing local general freight trucking--are classified in Industry 484110, General Freight Trucking, Local;
  3. 03Providing trucking of used household and office goods--are classified in Industry 484210, Used Household and Office Goods Moving;
  4. 04Providing waste collection--are classified in Industry Group 5621, Waste Collection;
  5. 05Providing independent truck driving services (except owner-operators)--are classified in Industry 488490, Other Support Activities for Road Transportation; and
  6. 06Providing hot shot oil field services (on- and off-road) on a contract basis--are classified in U.S. Industry 213112, Support Activities for Oil and Gas Operations.

Index Items

Agricultural products trucking, local

Ash, garbage, recyclable material, refuse, rubbish, trash, or waste hauling (except collection or disposal)

Automobile carrier trucking, local

Boat hauling, truck, local

Bulk liquids trucking, local

Coal hauling, truck, local

Dry bulk trucking (except garbage collection, garbage hauling), local

Dump trucking (e.g., gravel, sand, top-soil)

Farm products hauling, local

Flatbed trucking, local

Grain hauling, local

Gravel hauling, local

Livestock trucking, local

Log hauling, local

Milk hauling, local

Mobile home towing services, local

Oil and gas field equipment trucking, local

Refrigerated products trucking, local

Sand hauling, local

Tanker trucking (e.g., chemical, juice, milk, petroleum), local

Top-soil hauling, local

Tracked vehicle freight transportation, local

Trucking, specialized freight (except used goods), local

How Item Can Help

Analyzes historical shipment data to predict local demand trends and help managers make data-driven decisions on fleet allocation and staffing.

External Resources

← Back to NAICS Explorer