How much does a pilot car cost in Oregon?
Oregon falls in the Pacific Coastrate market. Pilot car work here is billed as a day rate or per mile, with a height-pole premium and the usual ancillary charges. Here's the going range.
Pacific Coast
Moderately sourcedThe highest-cost market — West Coast lead/chase runs ~$2.00–2.25/mi and height pole reaches ~$2.75/mi.
Ancillary charges
- Minimum / mini job
$250–400 standard ($350–500 height-pole or short move); some markets as low as $225.
- Standby / wait time
$25–75/hr — commonly ~$50/hr after the first hour; some operators $20–25/hr with the first 1–2 hours free.
- Deadhead (empty miles)
$0.50–1.25/mi (most commonly $0.50/mi, up to $1.00+); often waived when loaded miles exceed deadhead.
- Route survey
$100/hr (or ~$1.30/mi); ~$400/day in some markets.
- Overnight / layover
Overnight ~$75–125/night (or actual room cost); layover / downtime day $195–500 + room.
- No-go / cancellation
$200–350 (up to $400 if staged out-of-town), plus hotel; height-pole ~$250+. Pre-call windows apply.
- Night moves
+$0.25–0.50/mi or +$100–150/day; some operators a flat +15% after dark.
- Steer-car differential
Higher $/mi plus a daily flat — e.g. $1.65/mi + $60/day, or $2.00–3.00/mi in some markets.
Not sure whether your load even needs an escort in Oregon? See Oregon pilot car requirements →
Informational only. These are regional market ranges, not quotes or recommended prices, and AmberLight does not set rates. Actual pricing depends on the operator, the load, the route and current demand.
Get Oregon quotes from verified operators.
Post your load on AmberLight and have Oregon pilot operators quote it directly — pay up front, escrow-backed. Join the waitlist to be first in.
Join the waitlist