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In-house vs outsourced dispatch: the real cost comparison

A line-by-line look at what an in-house overnight dispatcher actually costs versus an outsourced desk — and when each one makes sense.

The short answer

An in-house overnight dispatcher typically costs $52,000–$68,000 a year fully loaded (salary, benefits, overtime, and turnover) for one person who still sleeps, takes holidays, and eventually quits. An outsourced desk covers the same hours — usually all of them — from roughly $22,000 a year, because the cost is shared across a trained team you don't employ.

Every fleet owner who has tried to staff an overnight desk knows the problem: you are paying a full-time salary for partial coverage, and the moment that one person is sick, on holiday, or quits, the desk goes dark. Outsourcing changes the math. Here is the honest, line-by-line comparison.

The true cost of one in-house dispatcher

The salary is only the start. Once you add it all up, a single overnight dispatcher in a mid-size US market looks like this:

  • Base salary: $38,000–$46,000
  • Benefits and payroll taxes: ~25–30% on top
  • Overtime and holiday cover: $7,000–$9,000
  • Turnover and rehiring: $5,000–$7,000 amortised
  • Management overhead and training: real, if hard to price

That lands most fleets between $52,000 and $68,000 a year — for one person covering one shift. To run a genuine 24/7 desk in-house you need three to four of them, plus a supervisor.

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What an outsourced desk replaces

An outsourced dispatch desk spreads a trained team across many clients, so you pay for coverage, not headcount. The same overnight hours typically run from $22,000 a year, and because it is a team rather than a person, there is no single point of failure — no sick days that take the desk down, no 2am call to the owner when the dispatcher doesn't show.

When in-house still wins

Outsourcing is not always the answer. If your call volume genuinely fills a full-time seat during your own office hours, and the work is highly specialised in ways a trained external team can't learn, an in-house dispatcher you already trust may be the right call for those hours. The strongest setup for most fleets is a hybrid: keep your day desk in-house and outsource the nights, weekends, holidays, and overflow you can't economically staff.

Common questions

For overnight, weekend, and overflow coverage, almost always — typically 50–70% less, because you pay for hours of coverage rather than a full-time salary plus benefits, overtime, and turnover.
No. Most fleets keep their in-house day desk and outsource only the hours they can't staff well, then expand if it proves out.
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Daniel Okoro Back-Office & Billing Lead · TransportBPO

Daniel heads back-office and billing operations at SS Support Network, handling invoicing, claims, and reconciliation for fleets across four markets. He writes about the paperwork side of transportation — the part that quietly decides whether a busy week is profitable.

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