Datatruck, a logistics technology startup, announced on January 29, 2026, that it has raised $12 million in Series A funding to develop what it describes as an “AI operating system for trucking” that modernizes freight routing and fleet management through predictive analytics and intelligent automation. The investment reflects growing recognition that the trillion-dollar trucking industry remains underserved by modern software despite being critical infrastructure for the global economy.
The platform addresses fundamental inefficiencies in how trucking companies plan routes, match loads with available capacity, optimize fuel consumption, predict maintenance needs, and manage driver schedules. Traditional transportation management systems rely on static rules and manual decision-making that struggle to adapt to dynamic conditions like traffic, weather, vehicle breakdowns, and last-minute load changes.
Datatruck’s AI-powered approach continuously analyzes historical performance data, real-time traffic and weather conditions, vehicle telematics, driver hours-of-service limitations, and customer delivery requirements to generate optimized route recommendations. The system learns from actual outcomes to improve predictions over time, creating a feedback loop that becomes more accurate as more data accumulates.
Key capabilities include predictive routing that accounts for traffic patterns and weather forecasts, intelligent load matching that pairs freight with optimal vehicles and drivers based on multiple constraints, fuel optimization that identifies most cost-effective routes and speeds, predictive maintenance that forecasts vehicle service needs before breakdowns occur, and automated compliance monitoring ensuring drivers don’t exceed hours-of-service regulations.
The trucking industry represents an enormous but fragmented market. In the United States alone, trucking generates over $800 billion in annual revenue, with tens of thousands of trucking companies ranging from massive fleets to owner-operators running single vehicles. However, technology adoption has lagged other industries, with many smaller operators still relying on spreadsheets, phone calls, and manual processes for core business functions.
Several factors drive increased technology adoption in trucking. Driver shortages create pressure to maximize utilization of available capacity. Fuel cost volatility makes efficiency gains directly impactful to profitability. Customers increasingly demand real-time visibility and precise delivery windows. Regulatory requirements around electronic logging devices and safety compliance create forcing functions for digital adoption. Environmental sustainability goals push companies to reduce emissions through better routing and vehicle utilization.
Datatruck faces competition from established transportation management system vendors like Oracle, SAP, and Manhattan Associates that are adding AI capabilities, logistics-focused software companies like Project44 and FourKites providing visibility platforms, and newer startups like Convoy, though many logistics startups struggled during the freight recession of 2023-2024, suggesting market maturation.
The $12 million Series A will fund several initiatives including expanding the product to serve additional segments beyond long-haul trucking such as last-mile delivery and dedicated contract carriage, building integrations with freight brokerages, shippers, and logistics platforms to expand network effects, hiring data scientists and engineers to improve AI model performance, and growing the sales team to penetrate the highly fragmented trucking market.
Customer traction provides validation for the approach. The company reports that early customers have achieved measurable improvements in metrics like miles per gallon, on-time delivery rates, deadhead miles, and vehicle utilization rates. These operational improvements translate directly to bottom-line impact in an industry operating on thin profit margins where percentage point improvements in efficiency can mean difference between profitability and losses.








