135,000 active FMCSA-registered grain and feed transport carriers serving America's agricultural heartland — all 50 states, phone, email, address, and USDOT.
All data sourced directly from the FMCSA DOT Census. Active carriers only — inactive and revoked registrations excluded.
Active FMCSA-registered grain & feed carriers across all 50 states
98.5% of active carriers have verified phone numbers on file
17% of carriers have email addresses on file
Clean, pre-formatted CSV ready to import into any CRM, email platform, or dialer — no reformatting needed.
$299 one-time · 135K carriers · 133K phone · 23K email · Instant CSV
Download Grain & Feed Carriers List — $299Grain elevators and co-ops use carrier contact data to build harvest-season transport networks, ensuring adequate inbound capacity during the critical fall harvest window when grain movement is at its peak.
Animal feed manufacturers use this list to source qualified carriers for distribution to livestock operations, feedlots, and farm-direct delivery programs across the agricultural heartland.
Grain and feed carriers haul high-value agricultural commodities with specific cargo coverage requirements. Insurance agents with agricultural lines use this list to prospect for new commercial trucking accounts.
Brokers specializing in bulk agricultural freight use this list to build grain carrier networks for harvest-season coverage and year-round feed distribution lanes.
Target grain carriers in September–October when harvest peaks and operators are most active. Insurance renewals, fuel programs, and financing decisions often happen during or just after the harvest push when operators have revenue and cash flow clarity.
The grain carrier segment is dominated by small operators and farmer-carriers. High phone coverage makes calling the most effective channel — target early morning before routes start or late afternoon after delivery.
Filter by Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Nebraska, and Kansas to target the highest-density grain carrier markets. These six states contain the majority of active grain transport operators in the country.
Grain carrier owners often operate out of rural addresses where digital outreach underperforms. Physical mail to the mailing address on file reaches operators who may not be active on email or social media.
Full 50-state coverage included. Filter by state column in Excel or your CRM.
Grain and feed carriers form the arterial network of American agriculture — moving the corn, soybeans, wheat, and animal feed that flow from farm to elevator to processor to export terminal. These carriers operate in the heart of the Midwest corn and soybean belt, with significant activity in the Great Plains wheat corridor and the Delta rice-growing region.
The grain transport market is intensely seasonal, with peak activity in fall harvest months (September–November) and spring planting-to-storage movements. Carrier demand spikes sharply during harvest, when every available grain truck is running at capacity — creating high-pressure periods for rate negotiation, capacity sourcing, and logistics relationships.
Every record sourced from the FMCSA DOT Census. The USDOT number on each record allows full compliance and fleet lookup before outreach.
135K active carriers · 133K phone records · 23K emails · All 50 states · Instant CSV · No subscription
Get Grain & Feed Carriers List — $299