Moving people and things from place to place is big business, and many different transportation companies can take you and your stuff wherever you want. By investing in the stocks of those companies, you can profit from transportation.
Transportation companies have been in the news lately due to supply chain bottlenecks that have caused a wide range of companies to revise their estimates. Ports, railroads, and truckers have been affected. The strong demand has helped pricing power, but labor shortages have led to higher costs and limited the upside for these stocks.
Below, we examine the top transportation stocks and explain how best to invest in them.
What are transportation stocks?
Transportation stocks are those of companies categorized as industrial businesses, which include everything from heavy equipment makers to transportation service providers. The common link is that all of the companies are involved in the movement of people or goods.
For all of the talk of digital transportation, there is still a fundamental need to move people and goods from point A to point B. While these companies are all in the same business, they don't all compete against each other. Truckers hauling goods on the interstates, for example, don't compete with airlines taking tourists to vacation destinations.
Top transportation stocks for 2026
Among the best-known transportation companies are the following:
| Name and ticker | Market cap | Dividend yield | Industry |
|---|---|---|---|
| United Parcel Service (NYSE:UPS) | $90.1 billion | 6.18% | Air Freight and Logistics |
| Union Pacific (NYSE:UNP) | $139.5 billion | 2.31% | Road and Rail |
| Old Dominion Freight Line (NASDAQ:ODFL) | $36.2 billion | 0.65% | Road and Rail |
| Kirby (NYSE:KEX) | $6.4 billion | 0.00% | Marine |
United Parcel Service

NYSE: UPS
Key Data Points
An industry leader in package delivery, United Parcel Service (UPS +0.26%) ships billions of packages and documents every year by land, sea, and air. UPS also maintains a network of stores, customer centers, and drop boxes.
Union Pacific

NYSE: UNP
Key Data Points

NASDAQ: ODFL
Key Data Points
With a massive coverage network, this trucking company serves the continental U.S., Hawaii, and Puerto Rico. Old Dominion (ODFL +0.29%) specializes in "less-than-truckload" or LTL trucking, which involves hauling loads for more than one customer on one truck. It is a complex part of the business that, when done well, can generate higher margins than other parts of the trucking industry.
Kirby

NYSE: KEX
Key Data Points
Pros and cons of investing in transportation stocks
Transportation stocks can offer ballast to a portfolio. That said, there are pros and cons to every sector. Factors investors should consider before buying in:
- Demand is ever-present. The need for the service is unlikely to disappear, and large companies tend to have stable revenue and the ability to pay dividends.
- But demand is cyclical, and there is little the companies can do to stimulate demand if their core customers cut back on shipping. When demand falls, revenue can fall with it.
Transportation stocks are best suited for long-term investors who are looking for a mix of income and modest growth, and not for investors seeking the potential for high growth over an extended period of time.
Related investing topics
Are transportation stocks right for you?
When the economy is strong, transportation companies tend to perform well because plenty of people and businesses want to travel and ship things. But travel and shipping demand can fall dramatically during tough economic times, so transportation stocks are best suited to investors who are comfortable with cyclicality.
Transportation stocks provide direct portfolio exposure to the state of the economy and have a reputation for signaling whether good times or bad are ahead.










