Ticket bundling is the process for determining if a ticket is an entire transaction, or part of another larger transaction.

As an example, tickets such as wait time, overweight charges or fees, are not part of the “main” job—likely picking up and delivering material. Tickets that are not part of the “main” job, are categorized as partial tickets.

Partial Ticket Criteria

For a ticket to be considered partial, it must meet one of the following criteria:

  1. Freight Payable is $0.
  2. The material or ticket code matches a defined list of tickets that are always partial.

If either of those are true it will try to match tickets with the following criteria:

  1. The truck on both tickets must be the same.
  2. The start time of the main ticket is before the partial ticket’s end time.
  3. The current tickets start time is before the main ticket’s end time.

If those three criteria are met the partial ticket is added to the main ticket as part of a single transaction.

List of partial codes

  1. 4444
  2. EnviroFee
  3. Dispatch
  4. Haul Adj

Difference Between Partial and Full Tickets

Since partial tickets share a lot of the same information with their main ticket, the only information that is counted for partial tickets is cost and billing information.