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Government contracts for trucking & hauling in Washington
A snapshot of open federal, state, and local opportunities in Washington, updated daily. To search them and get daily matches for your business, sign up free.
About trucking & hauling contracts in Washington
Trucking & hauling contracts in Washington typically cover dump-truck and aggregate hauling for road and public-works projects, equipment and heavy-machinery transport, freight deliveries between agency facilities, courier and box-truck delivery routes, and on-call hourly hauling IDIQs. Federal posts in this category fall under NAICS 484220 (Specialized Freight Trucking, Local), with related work under 484110 (General Freight Trucking, Local) and 492110 (Couriers and Express Delivery Services), and the bulk of the work flows to DoD installations, the U.S. Postal Service, GSA logistics offices, and state Departments of Transportation. Hauling and freight work is heavily small-business set-aside, and many state DOT hauling solicitations are reserved for DBE-certified or locally based operators, keeping single-truck and small-fleet owner-operators competitive.
Washington currently has 2 open trucking & hauling contracts in our database, with 1 added in the last 30 days. Volume in smaller markets is lumpy: a single base or facility can drive a quarter of annual postings. The most active buyer is DEPT OF THE NAVY (2 open posts), but contracts also come from federal civilian agencies and state-level departments operating in Washington.
Beyond federal opportunities, much of the trucking & hauling work in Washington is posted through Washington's Electronic Business Solution (WEBS), with recurring buyers including WSDOT, the University of Washington / Washington State University, and Sound Transit. Washington's Office of Minority and Women's Business Enterprises (OMWBE) certification is the gate for most diversity-set-aside spend at the state level. ContractRadar pulls federal postings from SAM.gov alongside state and local feeds so a trucking and hauling contractor doesn't have to monitor each portal manually.