02/10/2026
From a Nebraska farm kid hauling grain in an old truck to building one of the largest freight operations in America which failed in 2026.
In the 1960s, Wayne Hoovestol was just chasing miles across Iowa and Nebraska farm country, trying to make ends meet behind the wheel. No investors. No shortcuts.
By the early 1970s, Wayne founded Hoovestol Inc. and built a reputation for reliability so strong that the U.S. Postal Service trusted his trucks to move America’s mail through blizzards, blackouts, and impossible routes. When others said no, his company said yes.
Decades later, that same work ethic scaled into something massive: 10 Roads Express. A coast-to-coast postal and dedicated freight carrier operating thousands of trucks across all 50 states. For years, if mail moved by road in the U.S., there was a good chance 10 Roads was behind it.
At its peak, the company generated over $1.6 billion in annual revenue, employed thousands of drivers, and helped make Wayne Hoovestol a billionaire. From farm fields to freight lanes a true American logistics empire.
Then the ground shifted.
The U.S. Postal Service restructured its network. More mail was brought in-house. More volume was pushed to brokers. Almost overnight, 10 Roads lost nearly 70% of its revenue. No fraud. No collapse of character. Just a business built perfectly for a system that no longer existed.
Now, after 47 years of hauling America’s mail, 10 Roads Express is shutting down all operations by January 30, 2026. Thousands of drivers and employees will be affected. One of the largest trucking failures since 2023 and it isn’t even a bankruptcy.