Five HR trends that will impact employers in 2026
(January 5, 2026) Commentary by Angela Splinter, CEO, Trucking HR Canada
The trucking and logistics sector is entering a period of rapid transformation. Employers continue to navigate persistent recruitment and retention challenges, rising operating costs, evolving regulations, and the accelerating impact of new technology. In this environment, HR strategy is just as critical to competitiveness as operational performance.
The fleets that thrive in 2026 will:
- Embrace technology while maintaining human oversight
- Manage labour costs strategically
- Modernize hiring to attract diverse and emerging talent
- Offer flexible, worker-friendly scheduling
- Keep policies aligned with evolving regulations
Let’s take a closer look.
AI is transforming the cab and the office
Artificial intelligence is reshaping workflows across the industry. Fleets are using AI to streamline recruitment, automate administrative tasks, strengthen safety insights, and support faster onboarding.
At the same time, employers will need to use these tools responsibly. AI transparency requirements are already in place in Ontario and Quebec, with other jurisdictions likely to follow. Companies operating in areas without specific AI legislation should still be mindful of legal risks. For example, AI screening tools trained on historical data can inadvertently introduce bias into hiring decisions, exposing employers to potential human rights complaints.
HR teams will need clear policies outlining how AI is used, how decisions are reviewed, how privacy legislation is upheld, and how fairness is ensured.
In 2026, the most effective HR leaders will take a balanced approach: integrating AI-driven efficiencies while keeping human judgment central to workforce decisions.
Managing costs responsibly, not recklessly
Rising fuel prices, insurance premiums, equipment costs, and maintenance expenses continue to compress margins. Labour — one of the industry’s largest expenses — is under closer scrutiny, not simply for cuts, but for smarter, more strategic management.
Practical strategies to manage costs include:
- Strengthening retention to reduce turnover-related expenses
- Leveraging technology to streamline administrative work
- Designing efficient schedules that limit excessive overtime
- Upskilling current staff to reduce reliance on external hiring
- Maintaining compensation that is competitive yet sustainable
In 2026, cost containment isn’t about doing more with less — it’s about eliminating inefficiencies while safeguarding safety, compliance, and workforce well-being. This is a smarter, more sustainable path to long-term performance.
Hiring for capability, not just credentials
With continued recruitment challenges across all roles — drivers, mechanics, and office professionals — many employers are shifting from rigid credential requirements to skills-based hiring. This approach prioritizes relevant ability, potential, and transferable skills instead of traditional job histories.
It also opens doors to talent pools with tremendous potential, including newcomers, women, youth, and workers transitioning from other sectors.
Fleets that hire for capability will expand their candidate pipeline and strengthen long-term workforce development.
Flexibility as a competitive advantage
Flexibility is no longer exclusive to office jobs. In trucking, it is emerging through:
- More predictable, driver-friendly scheduling
- Creative route design
- Short-haul and hybrid run opportunities
- Compressed work weeks in certain roles
- Increased autonomy and choice where possible
While driving roles have natural limits, fleets that innovate around work–life balance are seeing stronger attraction and retention — especially among younger workers and women entering the industry.
Compliance: Protecting people and the business
Employment regulations continue to evolve, bringing significant implications for recruitment, workforce management, and HR operations. A major development unfolding across several provinces is pay transparency legislation. New federal provisions governing the treatment of temporary foreign workers are also expected.
Add in the government’s increasing focus on industry-targeted audits, penalties, and coordinated enforcement around misclassification, and it becomes clear: no fleet is immune from scrutiny. Employers should be prepared to demonstrate compliance across all areas of operations. Being compliant safeguards your workforce — and your business.
The bottom line: Success in 2026 starts with strategic, people-driven HR
As the industry navigates tighter margins, shifting talent dynamics, evolving regulations, and rapid technological change, HR leadership will be a defining competitive advantage in 2026. The fleets that succeed will be those that invest in people, embrace innovation responsibly, and build flexible, compliant, and capability-driven workplaces.
Employers that leverage Trucking HR Canada’s programs, tools, resources, and upcoming technology solutions will be well-positioned to meet these challenges.
We are committed to supporting carriers through smarter recruitment, stronger retention, improved compliance, and the practical, people-focused HR strategies needed for the year ahead — and beyond.
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