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Portland is a functional market on the West Coast but it is not in the same league as Los Angeles or Seattle in terms of carrier volume. Manheim Portland is on North Hayden Island Drive, right on the Columbia River near the Washington state border. ADESA Portland operates in the area with online sales. Copart has two Portland locations, Portland North and Portland South. IAA Portland serves the salvage market. The auction infrastructure is real. The interstate access is also genuinely good. I-5 is the main north-south corridor on the West Coast, running Portland to Seattle in the north and Portland to Sacramento and Los Angeles in the south. I-84 runs east through the Columbia River Gorge to Boise and connects to I-80 for runs to Salt Lake City, Denver, and the Midwest. The challenge is that Portland sits at the far northwest corner of the country. Carriers going north eventually hit Seattle and then there is nowhere else to go. Deadhead costs get factored in.
Pickups in Portland average 3 to 5 days. The I-5 corridor between Portland and Los Angeles is one of the most traveled carrier lanes on the West Coast, so southbound routes are well covered. Seattle is close enough that carriers often serve both metros on the same run, which helps. Routes heading east on I-84 to Boise and the Mountain West are covered but slower. The toughest times are winter months when I-84 through the Columbia River Gorge can get ice and the passes are difficult. Carriers running east can be delayed by weather from November through March. Portland itself is accessible with good suburban staging areas in Beaverton, Tigard, and Gresham being the easiest for carrier access. Get a quote to see what your specific route looks like.
Detroit is a unique market in auto transport. It is not as simple as just being a high volume hub, and here is why. The Motor City has enormous carrier activity because of the auto industry itself. Manheim Detroit is in Carleton, south of the city. Manheim Flint is up in Mt. Morris. IAA Detroit handles salvage volume for the metro. I-75 is the spine of the market, running north to Flint and south all the way to Miami. I-94 runs east to Chicago and west toward Port Huron and Canada. I-96 connects Detroit to Grand Rapids. The challenge is timing. When Ford, GM, or Stellantis ship new model year inventory out of Michigan in late summer and early fall, carriers are stacked with OEM loads. Single vehicle transport competes with factory production runs and sometimes loses.
Delivering to Detroit is generally smooth. The interstate access is genuinely excellent and carriers finishing a southbound run often loop back through Michigan on the return. The industrial west side and southern suburbs near I-75 are the easiest access points. Downtown Detroit and the Midtown area are more accessible than you might expect for a city of its age, but as always with urban cores, meetups near a parking area are sometimes cleaner. If you are at a suburban Michigan address you are in good shape.
Shipping a standard sedan from Portland to Detroit on open carrier currently estimates between $1200 and $1500. That is based on the 2,397-mile distance and current market conditions.
Portland runs slightly above the national average, particularly on routes heading east or long haul back to the Midwest and Southeast. The West Coast corridor to LA is the strongest and most competitive lane out of Portland and pricing there is fair. Routes to Seattle are also solid. Where it gets more expensive is on anything going cross-country because Portland is far from the carrier hubs in the central US and deadhead costs from the northwest corner add up. Winter adds a seasonal premium on routes that cross the Cascades or Rockies. Get a quote to see your exact price.
Detroit runs close to the national average, maybe slightly above on some lanes. Routes south to Florida on I-75 are extremely active and competitively priced because that is a natural back-and-forth carrier loop. Routes west to Chicago are solid. Where pricing goes up is on the cross-country runs to the West Coast or Southwest because those carriers have to come all the way out to Michigan to start their load. The new model year window in late summer is also a time when carrier capacity tightens and prices creep up. Get a quote to see your exact price.
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