OREGON - State transportation officials are putting drivers on notice: if the signs say chains or the roads are snowed over, you’d better have them on. One truck without proper chains can shut down a whole mountain pass and cost everyone time and money.

For anyone running freight through Oregon in the winter, this isn’t just another safety rule - it’s a serious business risk.

What the law actually requires

If your truck or combination is over 10,000 pounds GVW, you must use chains when conditions or signs demand them. Depending on your setup, that can mean chains on the drive tires, the trailer, or both. Solo heavy trucks (26,001+ lbs) need them on the drives. Tandem setups pulling trailers often need trailer chains too.

ODOT’s message is simple: know your equipment, carry the right chains, and check conditions before you head into the mountains. Don’t wait until you’re already on a grade trying to figure it out.

What it costs when you get it wrong

The fine is $880 per incident. That’s bad enough. But the real damage usually comes after: hours (or days) of lost driving time, missed delivery windows, towing or recovery fees, extra parking, and pissed-off brokers or shippers who don’t want their freight delayed again.

ODOT says chain-law violations across the state create more than $8 million a year in delay costs. That pain gets passed down to drivers and carriers in the form of higher insurance, lost reloads, and damaged relationships.

How this changes the load math

You book what looks like a solid $2,200 load. Then you hit a chain restriction without being prepared. Suddenly that nice rate disappears under fines, downtime, and recovery costs. The load isn’t judged by the gross anymore - it’s judged by what’s left after the mistake.

How to stay out of trouble

Check Oregon TripCheck before you commit to the route. Make sure you have the correct chains for your exact truck and trailer setup already on board. Factor chain-up time and winter risk into your load decisions upfront — not when you’re already halfway up the mountain.

Oregon’s chain rules are there for safety, but for owner-operators and small carriers they’re also a profit killer if you’re not ready. In winter mountain running, the smartest question isn’t “What’s the rate?” It’s “Will I still make money after the risk?”

Source

Source: Oregon Department of Transportation.