Preliminary data from FTR shows North American Class 8 truck orders surged in February, marking one of the strongest monthly performances in more than three years and reinforcing signs that the commercial vehicle market may be transitioning toward the early stages of recovery.
According to FTR’s preliminary data, North American Class 8 net orders reached 47,200 units in February, representing a 47% increase month over month and a 159% increase year over year. The result stands as the highest monthly order total since September 2022 and significantly exceeds the 10-year February average of 24,991 units.
The surge reflects strengthening momentum across multiple segments of the market, with both on-highway and vocational orders contributing to the growth. Over the past 12 months, Class 8 orders have totaled 258,466 units, indicating a steady build in demand.
The current order cycle—running from September 2025 through February 2026—is now up 4% year over year. While modest, that improvement represents a meaningful shift compared with the double-digit declines earlier in the order season.
Recent trends suggest that the commercial vehicle market is moving beyond the sharp corrections experienced in 2024 and early 2025. The steady narrowing of the year-over-year deficit and strengthening freight indicators point to a market that is stabilizing and beginning to rebuild momentum.
Several factors appear to be supporting the improvement in orders:
Together, these developments are creating conditions that support more confident fleet planning.
While some orders continue to reflect fleets replacing equipment purchases that were deferred during weaker market conditions, recent order patterns suggest a broader shift in purchasing behavior.
According to Dan Moyer, senior analyst for commercial vehicles at FTR: “February’s very solid year-over-year increase in net orders extended the firmer tone that has been building since late last year. While a portion of demand still reflects previously deferred replacement purchases reentering the market, the consistency and breadth of recent order activity suggest momentum is now being driven more meaningfully by improving freight fundamentals.”
Moyer noted that stronger freight activity, improving rate forecasts, and greater regulatory clarity are helping fleets move forward with longer-term capital planning.
“Improved clarity around tariff-adjusted pricing and EPA 2027 NOx regulations is reducing policy-related hesitation and giving fleets greater confidence to advance capital plans,” he said. “Order patterns increasingly suggest a structured replacement cycle and forward-looking fleet planning rather than short-term catch-up buying.”
Despite the strong order activity, several uncertainties remain that could influence fleet investment decisions as the year progresses.
Key risks include:
While these factors warrant close monitoring, the recent strength in Class 8 orders suggests that fleets are increasingly confident in underlying demand conditions.
FTR will release final February Class 8 order data later this month as part of its North American Commercial Truck & Trailer Outlook service. Final numbers may differ slightly from the preliminary estimate as additional OEM data becomes available.
For now, February’s surge adds to a growing body of evidence that the commercial vehicle market is moving away from the trough of the cycle and into a period of gradually strengthening demand.
As fleets respond to improving freight fundamentals and clearer policy signals, the coming months will help determine whether this momentum translates into a sustained recovery in equipment demand.
FTR’s Commercial Truck & Trailer Outlook delivers monthly forecasts, data, commentary, and analysis across the entire freight transportation landscape.
Learn more at: www.FTRintel.com
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