For contractors operating across multiple job sites, fleet is more than a line item. It plays a direct role in how work gets done, how quickly crews can move and how efficiently projects stay on track.

For this civil contractor, supporting projects across the United States, that reality was constant. Fleet equipment represented one of the largest costs in the business, influencing not only day-to-day operations but also long-term planning, risk exposure and the ability to scale.

As the company continued to grow, so did the impact of those decisions. Adding owned trucks was never just about meeting demand in the field. It meant committing capital, taking on maintenance responsibility and managing the full lifecycle of each unit.

Over time, leadership began to recognize that fleet decisions were doing more than supporting operations. They were shaping where capital was being allocated and where constraints were starting to build. That shift in perspective made one thing clear. The existing model would need to evolve.

Flexibility Limited

Like many contractors, the company built its fleet around ownership first, using leasing to fill gaps as needs evolved. That model provided control and, for a time, worked well to support day-to-day operations.

As the business grew, however, the tradeoffs became more apparent. Every additional truck required capital upfront, and each new unit added ongoing responsibility for maintenance, repairs and life cycle management. What started as a practical approach to fleet began to carry more weight, not just operationally, but financially.

With projects expanding across regions and demand continuing to increase, the need for additional trucks was clear. But continuing to rely solely on ownership and leasing meant committing more capital with every decision, limiting flexibility in other areas of the business.

Rather than continuing down the same path, the team began looking for a way to add capacity without increasing capital exposure, leading them to explore how rental could support a more flexible fleet strategy.

Introducing Rental Into Fleet Strategy

As that shift in thinking took hold, rental became a practical way to start reshaping how fleet supported the business. Instead of relying solely on ownership and leasing, the team began incorporating rental to better align fleet decisions with how work was being executed in the field.

· Rental provided a way to bring in additional trucks as demand in- creased, without requiring immediate capital outlay.

· Rather than continuing to add owned or leased units, the team could scale their fleet without locking into long-term assets.

· Fleet decisions could now reflect current project needs, instead of being driven solely by long-term ownership planning.

· Rental was introduced as a complement to ownership and leasing, helping create a more balanced rent/lease/ own approach.

Capital Preserved, Operations Strengthened

As rental became an established part of the company’s fleet strategy, the impact was felt across both financial performance and day-to-day operations.

More than $4 million in fleet value is currently on rent, allowing the business to scale operations without committing upfront capital or increasing capex on additional truck purchases.

Instead of being tied up in owned trucks, that capital remains available to support cash flow and other priorities across the business, including equipment investments, the ability to rent specialized equipment for specific phases of work and continued fleet expansion aligned with active projects.

Operationally, the burden of managing maintenance shifted away from internal teams. Instead of coordinating repairs and handling breakdowns, the team relied on responsive field service support aligned with next-day expectations, helping reduce downtime and keep crews focused in the field.

The process of adding fleet also became more predictable. When additional trucks were needed, requests were handled quickly, timelines were clear and crews had confidence in when equipment would arrive, eliminating uncertainty and keeping work moving in the field.

Moving Forward

Fleet decisions don’t just impact the job site. They shape how a business allocates capital, responds to demand and plans for growth.

By incorporating rental into a broader rent/ lease/own strategy, this contractor created a more balanced approach that preserves capital, reduces operational strain and supports consistent progress in the field.



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