Why buying a used truck is a harder bet in the IE than almost anywhere else

Citrus Belt Review: Used Class 8 prices have held about flat — up 0.8% over the past year per J.D. Power — with fewer trucks selling and lots aging. In a normal year that soft market would make now a fine time to buy.

But starting with the 2027 model year, the EPA makes new heavy-truck engines cut smog-forming NOx by 82 to 90%, and new trucks built to it were projected to run $20,000–$25,000 more. That normally triggers a "pre-buy" — a rush for cheaper pre-2027 diesels that drives up used prices.

The rush mostly hasn't come. The EPA has confirmed it's keeping the 2027 deadline and the standard — but a proposal expected this spring would ease the warranty and engine-life rules behind much of the cost, which could pull the premium down toward $15,000 a truck. So the date is locked while the price tag isn't, and the expected buying surge turned into wait-and-see. The result: the number that matters most — what a 2027 truck actually costs — won't be clear until the proposal lands, which makes pricing a used one today a guess.

For an IE operator, California doubles the fog. The state rules meant to push diesel out of port drayage are themselves up in the air — CARB pulled its enforcement request on the drayage piece of its Advanced Clean Fleets rule, and related rules are tied up in court. A trucker in Texas weighs one unknown, the federal cost. An IE trucker weighs that plus a state electric-truck mandate that may or may not survive — more trucks, more rules, less room to be wrong.

Previous
Previous

George Borba Jr. takes over as CVB Financial board chairman

Next
Next

The IE apartment market spent four years going from "no marketing needed" to a fight for every lease