Werner reported Q1 2026 revenue up 14% to $809 million with adjusted EPS of $0.02, as improving freight fundamentals, the FirstFleet acquisition, and a completed One-Way restructuring drove a 250 bps TTS margin expansion, though weather and fuel cut EPS by about $0.05 and logistics margins turned slightly negative. FirstFleet integration is running ahead of schedule with $18 million of synergies confirmed, and supply-driven capacity attrition is accelerating bid-season pricing gains. Management raised full-year Dedicated revenue-per-truck guidance to flat-to-+3% and reaffirmed fleet growth of 23%-28%, positioning for building earnings power as the year progresses.
Good afternoon, everyone. Earlier today, we issued our earnings release with our first quarter results. The release and a supplemental presentation are available in the investor section of our website at werner.com. Today's webcast is being recorded and will be available for replay later today. Please see the disclosure statement on slide two of the presentation, as well as the disclaimers in our earnings release related to forward-looking statements. Today's remarks contain forward-looking statements that may involve risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially. The company reports results using non-GAAP measures, which we believe provides additional information for investors to help facilitate the comparison of past and present performance. A reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is included in the tables attached to the earnings release and in the appendix of the slide presentation.
On today's call with me are Derek Leathers, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Chris Wikoff, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer. I will now turn the call over to Derek.
Thank you, Chris, and good afternoon, everyone. We appreciate you joining us today as we cover our first quarter results in the state of the market. In summary, market fundamentals are improving, and we are seeing a positive trajectory in our own numbers, which we'll get into shortly. Throughout this extended freight downturn, we have taken measured steps to position Werner for profitable long-term growth through our operational excellence and our commitment to safety and service. Executing on these priorities, we have actively managed our portfolio to make the business more resilient, differentiated, and optimized across market conditions. We are leaning further into dedicated and other specialized solutions, including expedited and cross-border Mexico, as well as asset-light offerings in logistics.
More specifically, in January, we expanded our dedicated offering through the acquisition of FirstFleet, adding scale, density, and exposure to more resilient customer verticals, including grocery and food and beverage. At the same time, we also restructured our One-Way business to create a more balanced and higher producing network that is now set to deliver improved profitability. In logistics, intermodal and final mile are seeing strong momentum. As a result, Werner is better positioned to capitalize on an improved market. So far, the recovery in rates has been largely supply driven as capacity continues to exit at an accelerated pace due to regulatory enforcement. As the supply and demand dynamic tightens, we are seeing rate lift and early positive momentum in the bid season. We expect pricing gains to continue with more meaningful improvement in the third and fourth quarters.
Taken together, these actions, including our FirstFleet acquisition, One-Way restructuring, and yield improvements, have strengthened our business and provides a line of sight to earnings growth this year. Turning to slide five to discuss our first quarter highlights. Since acquiring FirstFleet, we have taken a thoughtful but active approach to integration, prioritizing continuity while moving with intent to enhance value. We are retaining the majority of FirstFleet's management team and all drivers while aligning around a shared culture of safety, service, and innovation. FirstFleet customers have been receptive with a 98% renewal rate across 2/3 of the portfolio addressed to date. We have strong visibility into the remaining third and expect a similarly strong retention. Our integration of FirstFleet is progressing ahead of schedule.
At three months in, we have already realized over $1 million in savings and have implemented actions representing over $5 million of our $6 million synergy target for the current year. We remain confident in capturing the full $18 million in cost synergies mid-next year, which we expect will improve FirstFleet's operating margin by approximately 300 basis points. We are already seeing revenue synergies, including accelerated fleet startups, project opportunities, and increased backhaul. While still early, these efforts are enhancing customer value and improving returns. Top-line metrics show positive inflection, with strong improvement in dedicated revenue per truck per week and One-Way trucking revenues per total mile. Contract renewals are progressing well. Customers are accepting higher rates and supporting adjustments where needed to dedicated driver pay. Our dedicated customer retention, including FirstFleet, has climbed to 95%, closer to our historical trends.
The result of our One-Way restructuring is showing early gains, with first quarter miles per truck up 6% over prior year, despite significant disruptions from winter storms and revenues per total mile increasing 3.6%, our strongest pricing inflection in over three years. Strong execution of these initiatives led to One-Way revenue per truck per week increasing 9.6%, reflecting the combined effect of our restructuring and pricing actions. Pricing in the quarter departed from seasonal trends as Q1 rates typically decline sequentially after peak season. However, rates were flat sequentially, a pattern we have not seen in the last 10 years. One-Way Truckload revenue per total mile benefited from a smaller, more targeted fleet, intentionality to replace less profitable freight, stronger spot rates, and contractual rate increases secured through bid season.
In logistics, higher spot rates drove an increase in purchase transportation costs and pressured gross margins in truckload brokerage. The margin pressure is mostly transitory as contract rates are reset, and we saw improvement throughout the first quarter. We expect continued improvement in truckload brokerage margins as mid-season progresses, along with widespread implementation of higher contract rates. Lastly, I want to highlight our team's relentless focus on safety and cost discipline. In Q1, our DOT preventable accident rate per million miles was down an impressive 45% year-over-year. Excluding FirstFleet, insurance and claims expense was at its lowest quarterly level in over a year. We also continued to lower our cost to serve through technology and disciplined execution. Total operating expenses, excluding gains, insurance, fuel, and purchased transportation, were down by 5% year-over-year, and our logistics division serves as another proof point of tech-enabled savings.
Truckload brokerage operating expenses declined over 25% for the two years following the move to EDGE platform and with relatively stable volumes. Our asset business is now in focus. Building load assignment, equipment management, and planning capabilities takes time but is ramping. We expect all aspects of asset execution to be functional later this year. Moving to slide six, our plan to position the business for long-term growth and generate earnings power remains focused on three overarching priorities. First, driving growth in core business, which includes growing our Dedicated fleet, increasing One-Way production and rates, and expanding TTS and logistics adjusted operating income margin. Despite Q1 typically being the most challenging in the year, progress continues on these fronts. Our Dedicated fleet is growing, with end-of-period tractors up 46% year-over-year with the addition of FirstFleet.
Within our organic portfolio, we've increased exposure to new verticals like technology and aftermarket auto parts. Our pro-pipeline of opportunities coming out of Q1 is strong. On a year-over-year basis, dedicated revenues per truck per week increased steadily, driven by the value customers place on the high service and reliability and scale as capacity tightens. In One-Way Truckload, we realized significant improvement in miles per truck. We are securing mid-single-digit increases in one-way bids. Spot rates are higher, we can be more selective with freight choices given a better supply-demand backdrop. Truckload logistics margins improved every month in the quarter as contract rates reset and exposure grew to higher spot market pricing.
Second is driving operational excellence, which we are executing on by maintaining a resolute focus on safety and service, continuing to advance our technology roadmap, embedding cost discipline throughout the organization, and realizing efficiencies and synergies from acquisitions. We've taken out approximately $150 million of cost over three years and continue advancing our technology transformation. For some perspective on how our technology investments are beginning to translate into tangible results, we've centralized all loads into a single unified platform, achieving full network visibility, which is enhancing our ability to optimize, balance, improve yield, and reduce cost to serve. This integrated foundation has been a key enabler of our One-Way restructuring efforts over the past two quarters and positions us for continued margin expansion. Building on that foundation, we are increasingly leveraging AI and automation to drive operational excellence across the network.
This includes improving load planning and network design, increasing the speed and quality of tender acceptance, and automating routine workflows that historically required manual intervention. We're also seeing benefits in areas like maintenance, coordination, and back-office execution, where automation is reducing downtime, improving asset utilization, and allowing our teams to focus on higher-value activities. From a customer and safety standpoint, we are deploying real-time technology to provide immediate visibility into events such as weather-related shutdowns. While these actions can temporarily impact productivity, they enhance safety outcomes and help mitigate longer-term risk and insurance costs. Importantly, our approach to AI is disciplined and ROI-focused. We are not pursuing technology for its own sake. We are prioritizing use cases that solve core operational challenges, improve returns, and scale across the enterprise, supported by a strong governance framework.
While AI adoption has been more visible in asset-light brokerages, Werner stands out as a second-wave winner among asset carriers, given our significant technology transformation and a unified EDGE TMS platform. We're rolling out AI in phases, driving efficiency today and enabling growth over time. Later, Chris will provide further details on our final priority of driving capital efficiency. Cash flow for the quarter was up meaningfully year-over-year, and our capital allocation remains focused on fueling growth and shareholder value. Before Chris discusses our financial results in more detail, let's move to slide seven to provide our current market outlook. Capacity exits continue at an accelerated pace, driven by regulatory enforcement and carrier bankruptcies. Higher fuel prices is another more recent headwind for struggling carriers, and long-haul truckload employment has fallen below pre-COVID levels. As a result, further capacity attrition is likely.
Defying typical seasonality, spot rates remained elevated in Q1 and throughout April. We expect seasonal improvement throughout the year as capacity attrition continues. With rate lift currently more supply side driven, any demand improvement is likely to trigger even greater market momentum. While household balance sheets remain strong, the consumer continues to face a mix of puts and takes, including tax refunds, fuel prices, and interest rates. Regardless, the consumer continues to remain selective yet resilient, which bodes well for our mix of retail being more concentrated in non-discretionary items and discount and value retailers. Lean retail inventories position demand to play a larger role early in the recovery. While trade policy may impact restocking timing, non-discretionary replenishment provides a buffer against near-term volatility. We expect used truck values to improve later in the year.
Thank you, Derek, and good afternoon, everyone. We'll continue on slide 10. All performance comparisons here are year-over-year, unless otherwise noted. First quarter revenues totaled $809 million, up 14%. Adjusted operating income was $11.9 million, and adjusted operating margin was 1.5%. Adjusted EPS was $0.02. Adverse weather early in the quarter and rapidly increasing fuel prices in March negatively impacted EPS by approximately $0.05. Consolidated gains on sale of property and equipment totaled $3.8 million, up from $2.8 million in the prior year period. Turning to slide 10. Truckload Transportation Services total revenue for the quarter was $594 million, up 18%. Revenues net of fuel surcharges increased 16% year-over-year at $516 million. TTS adjusted operating income was $14.8 million.
Adjusted operating margin net of fuel was 2.9%, an increase of 250 basis points. The year-over-year improvement was driven from lower insurance and claims expense for our legacy business, accretive results from the addition of FirstFleet, profitable improvement in One-Way Truckload, and higher gains from the sale of used equipment. Our fleet metrics are on slide 11. TTS average trucks totaled 8,454 for the quarter, a 14% increase. Note that FirstFleet trucks were in the average for 2/3 of the quarter as the transaction closed at the end of January. The TTS fleet ended the quarter at 9,040 trucks, up 1,940 or 27% sequentially.
Truck additions from FirstFleet were partially offset by normal seasonal declines in Dedicated and fewer One-Way trucks, which we expected from our restructuring efforts. Our One-Way average fleet size declined 19%, while total miles were down 15% as miles per truck improved 6%. Within TTS and our Dedicated business for the first quarter, trucking revenue net of fuel was $372 million, up $93 million or 33%. Dedicated represented 73% of TTS trucking revenues, up from 64% a year ago. At quarter end, the Dedicated fleet was up 2,230 trucks from where we started the year. A 46% increase from year-end with the addition of FirstFleet. Dedicated average trucks increased 32% year-over-year and 28% sequentially, with FirstFleet contributing for only 2/3 of the quarter.
We experienced normal seasonal sequential change in the Dedicated fleet. Dedicated represented 78% of the TTS trucks at quarter end. Dedicated revenue per truck per week rose 0.8% this quarter, though impacted by the addition of FirstFleet in the mix. On a standalone basis, Werner's legacy Dedicated fleet delivered a 1.8% increase, while FirstFleet growth in revenue per truck per week exceeded 4%. On a pro forma basis, with FirstFleet included in the prior year baseline, growth would have been approximately 200 basis points higher or near 3%, reflecting solid pricing momentum across the combined Dedicated fleet. In our One-Way business for the first quarter, trucking revenue net of fuel was $136 million, a decrease of 12%. Average trucks declined 19% to 2,122 trucks.
Sequentially, the fleet size contracted 11% and was down 264 trucks. Revenue per truck per week increased 9.6% due to higher rates and better production. Miles per truck increased 5.7% despite winter weather, and revenues per total mile increased 3.6%, and empty miles decreased 40 basis points year-over-year and 60 basis points sequentially. As a reminder, the strategic restructuring of our One-Way Truckload business was designed to enhance profitability by maximizing production and mitigating unprofitable freight. Our actions are complete, and One-Way operating margin improved in the quarter. We expect further benefit as we realize a full quarter of these changes in Q2. Logistics results are shown on slide 12. In the first quarter, Logistics revenue was $196 million, representing 24% of total first quarter revenues.
Revenues were flat year-over-year but declined 6% sequentially as we focused on yield management in a margin-pressured environment where purchase transportation costs accelerated more rapidly than sell side rate renewals with our customers. Truckload logistics revenues, which represented 72% of total logistics revenues, decreased 4% on 9% lower shipments, partially offset by 5% higher revenue per load. The revenue per load improvement was from disciplined pricing and load acceptance, but more than offset by higher purchase transportation costs, reducing gross margin by 90 basis points. Intermodal revenues accounting for roughly 17% of the logistics segment rose by 18%, driven by a 22% increase in load volume, partially offset by a 3% decline in revenue per load. Final mile revenues, which comprise the remaining 11% of the segment, increased 8% year-over-year.
Logistics adjusted operating margin was -0.4%, a 70 basis points decrease driven by lower volumes and gross margin pressure, which we expect to improve going forward as we adjust sell side rates. Let's review our cash flow and liquidity on slide 13. We ended the first quarter with $62 million in cash and cash equivalents. Operating cash flow was $89 million, up over 200% year-over-year and up over 40% sequentially. Similar to a low CapEx quarter to begin 2025, our first quarter CapEx was a modest $2 million. Net CapEx for the trailing four quarters is 5.6% of revenue. First quarter free cash flow was $87 million or 10.8% of total revenues.
Total liquidity at quarter end was $513 million, including $62 million of cash on hand and $451 million of combined availability under our credit facilities. We ended the quarter with $932 million in debt, consisting of $54 million in assumed low-cost capital leases from the FirstFleet acquisition and $878 million on our credit facilities. Debt increased $180 million sequentially as a result of the acquisition and is up $292 million from a year earlier. Net debt increased $282 million year-over-year. Covenant-defined pro forma net leverage at the end of the quarter was 2x, including pro forma synergies and trailing 12 months of FirstFleet results. We continue to have a strong balance sheet, access to low-cost capital, and no near-term maturities in our credit facilities.
Let's turn to slide 14. When it comes to broad capital allocation decisions, we will remain balanced over the long term, strategically investing in the business, returning capital to shareholders, and maintaining appropriate leverage. With the acquisition of FirstFleet, our focus in 2026 will be on integrating the business, gaining momentum on realizing $18 million of targeted synergies, and enhancing value. On slide 15, let's review our guidance for the year, which includes FirstFleet. We are reaffirming our full year average truck fleet guidance range of up 23%-28%. Availability of quality drivers has been an increasing challenge more recently as a symptom of an improving macro environment. The dedicated pipeline is strong, and we expect TTS truck growth as the year progresses. Our full year 2026 net CapEx guidance range remains between $185 million and $225 million.
Dedicated revenue per truck per week increased 0.8% year-over-year and was closer to 3% on a pro forma basis. We are updating our full year guidance from a range of -1% to +2% to be flat to +3%. We have been successful in securing low to mid-single digit increases in contract renewals for both our legacy Dedicated fleet and the FirstFleet business. One-Way Truckload revenue per total mile guidance for the second quarter is up 1%-4%, muted by the ongoing mix change following the restructuring completed late in the first quarter. Our effective tax rate in the first quarter was 24.9% before discrete items. We are maintaining our full year 2026 guidance range of between 25.5% and 26.5%.
The average age of our truck and trailer fleet at the end of first quarter was 2.9 and 6.3 years, respectively. Regarding other modeling assumptions, we continue to expect the net interest expense this year will be between $40 million and $45 million. We anticipate stable used equipment demand and resale values through 2026, given OEM production constraints and the evolving regulatory backdrop that will be an incentive towards high-quality used assets. Our anticipated gains on sale of used equipment and revenue-generating assets for the year remains in a range of $8 million-$18 million. With that, I'll turn it back to Derek.
Thank you, Chris. We believe Werner is better positioned today than we have been in prior cycles. We have used this downturn to make the business more resilient, improve the quality of our portfolio, and strengthen our ability to convert an improving market into stronger financial performance. We are encouraged by the progress we are making across the business, including dedicated growth, FirstFleet integration, One-Way improvement, logistics margin recovery, technology implementation, and continued cost discipline. While there is still work ahead, we believe the foundation is in place for earnings improvement to build as the year progresses. With that, let's open it up for questions.