Volvo Trucks North America Lands Record 400-Truck Order for New VNL 860 Sleepers
Transport Enterprise Leasing (TEL) ordered 400 Volvo VNL 860 sleepers, the largest single order in Volvo Trucks North America's history, reflecting a trend toward upgrading fleets for better fuel efficiency, safety, and…
400 trucks
10%
15,000
What Happened
TEL, headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, operates one of the largest fleet leasing programs in the U.S., providing heavy-duty trucks to fleets and owner-operators. The 400 Volvo VNL 860 sleepers will be deployed through TEL's leasing program across North America, giving drivers access to premium long-haul trucks.
The all-new Volvo VNL, which began production in October 2024 at Volvo's New River Valley plant in Dublin, Virginia, delivers up to 10% better fuel efficiency than its predecessor through advanced aerodynamics and powertrain refinements. Approximately 15,000 new VNLs are now in commercial traffic in the U.S. and Canada.
“This record-setting order for the all-new Volvo VNL reflects the confidence fleets have in our flagship platform. One year into production, the real-world performance of the new VNL is delivering measurable results in fuel efficiency, safety and driver comfort.”
“The Volvo VNL 860 brings a distinct combination of innovation, safety and efficiency that complements the rest of our fleet extremely well. This gives our customers more choice and flexibility while maintaining the high standards they expect from TEL equipment.”
Why this matters
This massive order signals strong confidence in Volvo's new VNL platform, which promises up to 10% better fuel economy and advanced safety features, helping fleets lower operating costs amid rising demand for efficient long-haul trucks.
Terms in This Story
- fleet leasing
- A service where a company leases multiple vehicles to other businesses, often including maintenance and management.
- sleeper
- A heavy-duty truck with a sleeping compartment behind the cab for long-haul drivers.
- Class 8
- The largest class of heavy-duty trucks in the U.S., with a gross vehicle weight over 33,000 pounds.
Summarised from the linked release; details can be imperfect — always verify against the original source.