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Bailment Pool | Fleet Management

An inventory of already built vehicles on consignment at body companies waiting for sale or upfitting by dealers or leasing companies.

A bailment pool is an inventory of unassigned, already-built chassis or finished vehicles that an original-equipment manufacturer (OEM) places on consignment with a body company or upfitter while retaining title until a dealer, leasing company, or fleet buyer selects the unit for sale or further modification. [1,2]

Because the arrangement rests on the common-law concept of bailment—the bailor (OEM) entrusts its property to a bailee (upfitter) who must safeguard and return it in agreed condition—the units remain outside ordinary dealer allocations yet can be ordered at factory-pricing levels.[3,4]

Industry literature also calls these reserves “chassis pools” or “truck pools,” and they let fleets bypass months-long production queues without resorting to random dealer stock. [1,2]

For fleet managers, bailment pools create a strategic middle ground between buying off-the-lot and waiting for bespoke factory orders, trimming order-to-delivery times by eight to twelve weeks in many cases.[5,6]

Because the vehicles sit adjacent to the upfit line, they can move directly through ship-thru or freight-re-entry channels, cutting logistics costs and enabling rapid deployment of work-ready bodies and equipment.[5,7]

Fleets also avoid dealer mark-ups and often capture OEM incentives, generating savings of roughly $2,000–$3,500 per truck while maintaining consistent specifications across the fleet.[1,8]

Operationally, pool agreements cap both unit counts and holding time: OEMs typically grant a 40- to 90-day interest-free “floor-plan” window before storage or finance charges apply, so disciplined turnover is essential.[9]

Manufacturers expand these networks—e.g., GM’s Specialty Vehicle bailment pools—to ensure regional availability of work-ready chassis for dealers and fleets.[10]

The model best suits fleets with fairly standard vocational builds; buyers needing highly customized or high-trim configurations may still rely on factory orders despite the longer lead times. [1,3]

Once a dealer or lessee claims the chassis and title transfers, the bailment ends, relieving the upfitter of liability and converting the unit into normal inventory under bailment law. [4]

Bibliography

  • Merchants Fleet. “Bailment Pools 101: What They Are and When to Use Them.” Blog post, accessed April 24 2025.
  • Cass, Russ. “Improving Order-to-Delivery Times: You Want That Truck When?” Work Truck Online, Sept 1 2007.
  • Knapheide. “What Are Bailment Pools, Drop Shipping and Ship-Thru Services?” Blog, Feb 21 2023.
  • Hayes, Adam. “Bailment: Definition, How It Works, Types, and When It Ends.” Investopedia, updated 2024.
  • Utilimaster. “Bailment Pools, Ship-Thru, and Drop Ship.” Webpage, accessed April 24 2025.
  • “18 Recommendations to Improve OTD for Upfits.” Work Truck Online, 2015.
  • Independent Truck Upfitters. “Bailment Pools, Ship-Thru, and Drop Ship.” Webpage, accessed April 24 2025.
  • Dealers Truck Equipment Co. “Bailment Pool.” Webpage, accessed April 24 2025.
  • Merchants Fleet. “Bailment Pools 101,” section “How Do I Arrange for a Bailment Pool?” accessed April 24 2025.
  • Work Truck Staff. “Morgan Adds to GM Bailment Pool Locations.” Work Truck Online, Feb 20 2019.

Further Reading