Lane Overview: Los Angeles to New York
The Los Angeles to New York LTL lane covers approximately 2,886 miles between the West Coast and Northeast regions. Standard transit runs 5-7 business days depending on carrier routing and terminal schedules. Common equipment on this corridor includes Dry Van, Reefer (temp-controlled). Cross-dock facilities at LA Gateway, Inland Empire, Bay Area Hub support consolidation and transit optimization. Peak volumes Aug-Oct (produce season). Rate pressure Dec-Jan.
How WARP Operates the Los Angeles to New York Lane
WARP covers the Los Angeles to New York corridor with 9 vetted carriers providing LTL capacity.
Service capabilities on this lane include: Real-time scan events at pickup, in-transit, and delivery; Estimated 5-7 business day transit window; Pallet-level tracking with delivery appointment scheduling.
Shipments receive pallet-level tracking from pickup through delivery with appointment scheduling and delivery confirmation.
Nearby cross-dock operations at LA Gateway and Inland Empire enable consolidation and re-routing when exceptions occur.
Exception alerts fire within 30 minutes of any status change.
WARP operations team manages carrier coordination, rescheduling, and resolution without requiring shipper follow-up.
Traditional vs Warp
Traditional
5–6 days average transit
6–7 terminal handoffs
Higher damage risk
Unpredictable pricing
Warp
3–4 days average transit
Direct linehaul to Texas
Fewer touches, reduced damages
Pricing with full transparency
Why Shippers Choose Warp
National coverage: More than 50 cross docks across the U.S. and Canada, ready on day one.
Variable cost model: No need for long term leases or fixed facilities. You pay only when you use the network.
Pallets and cartons under one roof: Traditional cross docks are pallet only or carton only. Warp handles both seamlessly.
ZIP 5 parcel prep: Unlike generic docks, we can break freight down to the carton and stage by ZIP 5 before injection into parcel networks.
Built for retailers: Every dock is designed with retail flows in mind, not just freight transfer.