Geotab's new Index reveals major performance gap between Europe's capital cities
DUBLIN, May 13, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- , a global leader in connected vehicle and asset management solutions, today published its first European Freight Efficiency Index titled "" revealing a 144% performance gap between Europe's major cities with Berlin ranking highest in freight efficiency and Dublin in third place.
Every day, millions of vehicles move through Europe's cities carrying the things that keep economies alive - food, medicine, materials, parcels. But not all cities move them equally. The report uncovers that the same fleet, running the same vehicles, can experience fundamentally different realities depending on the city it operates in - with wide-reaching consequences for cost, emissions and performance.
At one end, Berlin leads the Index with a score of 61 out of 100, where traffic remains manageable and, crucially, predictable. At the other, Madrid ranks last with a score of 25, creating a 144% efficiency gap between the best and worst-performing cities - a stark difference that translates directly into time, fuel and operational cost.
Amsterdam (59) trails just behind Berlin, nearly matching the city in terms of efficiency. Dublin (49) and Rome (48) follow forming a workable tier, while Paris (37) and London (29) join Madrid in a category where the system itself begins to work against the fleet.
Dublin sits in the middle tier with evident but manageable congestion and broadly consistent journey times. Where freight operators have an edge is scheduling: unlike passenger and service vehicle fleets tied to business hours and customer appointments, freight operators can structure delivery windows around known congestion periods. In Dublin, the data shows that this flexibility translates directly into better performance with freight operators consistently outperforming passenger vehicle fleets operating in the same conditions.
What emerges from Geotab's first 'European Freight Efficiency Index' is a shift in how freight efficiency should be understood - away from day-to-day congestion and towards the infrastructure that shapes how cities move.
In Berlin, a polycentric layout distributes traffic across multiple routes, creating a flowing network that remains stable throughout the day. In Amsterdam, compact design and signal optimisation keep vehicles moving – even at slow speeds – rather than queuing.
But infrastructure is only part of the picture. How fleets plan, schedule and adapt to the network they operate in is equally consequential. Cities like London, Paris and Madrid reveal that congestion alone is not the defining issue - unpredictability is. And for fleets, that unpredictability creates what the Geotab data points to as a 'structural tax': extra buffer time, broken delivery windows and lost efficiency that cannot be solved through routing or driver training alone.
At a fundamental, and perhaps counterintuitive level, cities that move slowly can still be efficient, if they keep moving.Rome, for example, combines high congestion with some of the lowest idling waste, as traffic flows in a continuous crawl rather than a stop-start pattern. London, by contrast, sits at the opposite end - where repeated stopping and starting drives inefficiency, fuel waste and emissions.
Edward Kulperger, Senior Vice President, EMEA at Geotab, said:
Read the full report .
The European Urban Freight Efficiency Index scores each city on a scale of 0 to 100, based on two dimensions evaluated separately for passenger vehicles and trucks, then combined using a 60/40 weighting (passenger/truck) to reflect that most road demand comes from passenger vehicles while the truck component captures logistics efficiency specifically.
The first dimension, how traffic flows, accounts for 75% of each vehicle score and measures three things: congestion burden (cumulative congestion across the day, 50% weight), uncongested windows (hours per day of free-flowing traffic, 25% weight), and travel time variability (journey time predictability, 25% weight).
The second dimension, what congestion costs, accounts for the remaining 25%, measuring mid-trip vehicle idling as a proxy for waste produced by the system. Higher idle ratios indicate congestion, poor signal timing and bottlenecks.
Idle fuel costs were estimated using 2025 average pump prices from the European Commission's Weekly Oil Bulletin for EU cities, and the UK Government's Weekly Road Fuel Prices dataset for London, converted at the 2025 average GBP/EUR rate.
All scores are based on full-year 2025 data (January–December) from Geotab's connected vehicle platform across seven cities: Berlin, Amsterdam, Dublin, Rome, Paris, London and Madrid. Scores represent normalised, relative comparisons from a sample of connected vehicles, not a census.
Geotab is a global leader in connected vehicle and asset management solutions, with headquarters in Oakville, Ontario and Atlanta, Georgia. Our mission is to make the world safer, more efficient, and sustainable. We leverage advanced data analytics and AI to transform fleet performance and operations, reducing cost and driving efficiency. Backed by top data scientists and engineers, we serve approximately 100,000 global customers, processing 100 billion data points daily from more than 5 million vehicle subscriptions. Geotab is trusted by Fortune 500 organisations, mid-sized fleets, and the largest public sector fleets in the world, including the US Federal government. Committed to data security and privacy, we hold FIPS 140-3 and FedRAMP authorisations. Our open platform, ecosystem of outstanding partners, and Geotab Marketplace deliver hundreds of fleet-ready third-party solutions. This year, we're celebrating 25 years of innovation. Learn more at and follow us on LinkedIn or visit our blog.
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Media contact: Beachhut PR, Marie Schusterschitz, Senior Account Executive, geotab@beachhutprcom; Geotab: Romina Dashghachian, Strategic Communications Lead EMEA, Geotab,
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