Ohio to Utah Freight shipping and trucking services are in high demand; Columbus to Provo is a major route for freight shipping services.
The Columbus, OH to Provo, UT route is a 1,713 mile trip that takes a little over 25 hours of driving to complete. Shipping from Ohio to Utah ranges from a minimum of 1,492 miles and 22 hours from Eaton, OH to Crescent Junction, UT, to over 1,961 miles and a minimum of 28 hours on the road from Cleveland, OH to St. George, UT. The shortest route from Ohio to Utah is along the I-80 W; however, there’s also a more southern route that uses the I-70 W traveling through Denver, CO and Kansas City, KS.
Ohio Freight Shipping Quotes and Trucking Rates
Almost Home of the Mighty Buckeyes, Ohio links the northeast to the midwest and contains some of the busiest trucking routes in the country. Ohio is within a one-day drive of 50 percent of US residents and 70 percent of North America’s manufacturing capacity. Bordered to the north by Lake Erie, an important cargo port area and to the south by the Ohio River, Ohio’s nearest neighbors are Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ontario, Indiana, Kentucky and West Virginia.
Ohio’s climate ranges from mild to the south to cooler to the north, where severe lake effect snowstorms are not uncommon in the winter, making travel in the north treacherous during the worst parts of the winter. Major cities include Ohio’s capitol, Columbus, along with Cleveland, Cincinnati, Toledo, Dayton and Akron.
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Utah Freight Shipping Quotes and Trucking Rates
Almost all of Utah’s nearly three million inhabitants live among the valleys of the Wasatch Front. As a result, much of the state is largely uninhabited and unspoiled. To the west of the I-15, the landscape is broadly desert. To the south and east, the soft sandstone has been etched by wind and weather over time to form stunning natural sculptures. Dotted throughout the state are pine forests, valleys and basins.
The climate is semi-arid or desert, with moisture coming chiefly from Pacific Ocean storms or Gulf of California monsoons. Winter inversions are common, especially around the basins, causing haze and freezing fog. Tornados are unusual, but wildfires are increasingly common due to the high summer temperatures and dry climate.
Ohio to Utah Freight shipping quotes and trucking rates vary at times due to the individual states industry needs. Since Ohio and Utah are mainly industrial with manufacturing and distribution centers throughout, we see plenty of shipments by Flatbed as well as by the more common dry van trucks. Our Less Than Truckload (LTL) carriers in both Ohio and Utah are also running a number of regular services between the two states, and it’s an active route for heavy haul freight shipments, as well.