
How Freight Agent Programs Compare
A detailed look at commissions, autonomy, and back-office support to help experienced brokers choose the right fit.
What Is a Freight Agent Program?
A freight agent program is a structure where an experienced broker operates under a larger brokerage’s authority or platform while benefiting from shared infrastructure, compliance support, and business services. These programs vary widely in how much autonomy agents retain, how commissions are structured, and how back-office support is delivered.
How Experienced Brokers Compare Operating Models
Experienced freight brokers don’t all want the same thing from their next move. Some prioritize autonomy and ownership. Others value operational support, integrated technology, or a structure that helps them scale more efficiently.
That’s why comparing freight agent programs isn’t just about brand recognition, it’s about understanding operating models. The comparisons below are designed to help experienced brokers evaluate how different programs are structured, what responsibilities agents retain, and how each model supports long-term business goals.
How These Comparisons Help
Each comparison page focuses on structural differences, not marketing claims. Reviewing multiple comparisons can help clarify:
- How commissions, fees, and overall economics are structured
- Where operational responsibility sits (agent vs. brokerage)
- How technology and back-office support are delivered
- How much autonomy and long-term business equity an agent retains
Rather than promoting a single “right” choice, these comparisons are intended to support informed, experience-based decision-making.
Comparison Categories
Traditional Freight Agent Programs
These comparisons focus on agent-based brokerage models, where experienced brokers operate as independent agents within a larger brokerage framework.
Platform- or Tool-Based Operating Models
These comparisons focus on technology- or platform-first approaches, where brokers remain fully independent and use tools to support their operations rather than joining an agent network.
Freight Agent Program Comparisons
Bennett vs SPI Logistics
Explores the differences between a structured, traditional agent environment and SPI’s agent-first model, including how commissions, technology, and autonomy are handled.
Landstar vs SPI Logistics
Helps brokers understand how a large, well-known agent network compares to SPI’s more flexible, independently operated agent model.
Armstrong vs SPI Logistics
Highlights differences in commission transparency, operational control, and how much structure agents operate within day-to-day.
Trinity vs SPI Logistics
Focuses on agent support, back-office involvement, and how each model approaches scalability for experienced brokers.
TruckSmarter vs SPI Logistics
Compares two fundamentally different approaches: running a brokerage using a broker-facing technology platform versus operating as an independent agent within a full brokerage infrastructure.
How to Choose the Right Model
While every broker’s situation is different, a few high-level considerations often guide the decision:
Autonomy
Do you want to operate entirely under your own authority, or independently within a brokerage framework?
Support & Operations
Do you prefer to manage billing, compliance, and collections yourself, or have those handled centrally?
Business Goals
Are you focused on maintaining full independence, or on scaling efficiently with shared infrastructure?
Reviewing multiple comparisons can help clarify which operating model best aligns with how you want to run and grow your business.
Considering Your Next Move?
If you’re an experienced freight broker comparing different agent programs and operating models, a quick conversation can help clarify what fits best. Share a few details below, and someone from the SPI team will reach out to talk through your goals and whether SPI’s model aligns with how you want to operate.
"*" indicates required fields
Frequently Asked Questions
About Freight Agent Programs
A freight agent operates under another brokerage’s authority and often shares infrastructure, while an independent broker runs their own authority and handles all operational tasks.
Ownership depends on the program. Some let you retain your book if you leave, others do not.
Commission splits vary widely across freight agent programs. Some traditional networks retain a large portion of revenue, while others offer higher splits with different tradeoffs in support or structure. At SPI Logistics, experienced agents can earn up to 75% commission, while still benefiting from centralized back-office support, compliance, and operational infrastructure. As with any program, the exact split depends on the structure and terms of your agreement, so it’s always worth confirming details during initial discussions.
They can be, especially if you want support with billing, compliance, or technology and prefer to focus on selling and relationships.
