Milk Delivery Route Cost Calculator — Free

Estimate your daily fuel cost, total distance, time required and cost per delivery in seconds. See how much you could save by optimizing your milk delivery route.

Route inputs

City: 0.2–0.4 · Suburb: 0.5–1.0
2W: 40–60 · 4W: 12–18
Includes parking, handover, collection
Leave 0 if you deliver yourself

Route planning, customer lists, delivery tracking

DudhHisaab gives every delivery session a ready-to-go customer list with GPS stops, skip-vacation logic and tick-off as you go. Your route stays tight, your fuel bill stays low.

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Why milk delivery route cost matters

Fuel and time are the two biggest variable costs in a milk delivery business after the milk itself. A 100-customer route run twice a day on a petrol two-wheeler can burn ₹3,500–₹6,000 in monthly fuel alone, and that is before you count the delivery person’s time. For a business running on 10%–15% net margins, a 20% improvement in route efficiency directly translates into 2–3 percentage points of margin — real money.

Typical Indian milk delivery route parameters

  • Urban apartment route: 80–150 customers, 12–25 km/day, 1–1.5 min per drop
  • Suburban / colony route: 60–120 customers, 15–35 km/day, 2–3 min per drop
  • Village route: 30–80 customers, 20–50 km/day, 3–6 min per drop (includes longer doorstep walk)
  • Two-session delivery: Double the daily distance — morning + evening milk delivery adds up fast
Example — 100-customer urban route: 100 drops at 0.3 km average spacing = 30 km daily. Petrol 2-wheeler at 45 km/L × ₹105/L = ₹70/day fuel cost. 100 drops × 2 min = 200 minutes (3 h 20 m). Cost per delivery (fuel only) = ₹0.70. Monthly fuel: ₹2,100. Double it for morning + evening: ₹4,200/month.

How route optimization actually saves money

Most small milk delivery routes grow organically — a new customer gets added wherever they sign up, and nobody re-sequences the route. Over months the route becomes a sprawl with back-tracking, wasted distance, and longer delivery windows. Three simple fixes that typically save 15%–25%:

1. Cluster customers into tight geographic groups

Group 6–10 neighboring households as a single "cluster stop". Deliver all customers in the cluster before moving to the next one. This alone eliminates most back-tracking.

2. Run the route as a single loop, not a back-and-forth

Your start and end point should be close to each other. If your route is a line (go out 5 km, come back 5 km), switching to a loop can cut 15%–20% of the daily distance.

3. Drop sprawl customers or charge extra

Every dairy has one or two "faraway favourites" who break the route. Either charge a delivery surcharge, hand them to another milkman, or ask them to collect from a central point. One sprawl customer can add 3 km per day — that is 90 km and ₹210 of fuel per month, for a single ₹500 monthly bill.

When to upgrade your vehicle

If your daily route is under 20 km, a fuel-efficient petrol scooter is the cheapest option. Between 20–50 km, consider a CNG three-wheeler if you also carry extra crates, packaging or add-on products. Above 50 km/day or 200+ customers, an electric cargo three-wheeler is the most economical long-term — running cost drops to ₹15–₹25 per day of electricity versus ₹100–₹200 of fuel.

Use this calculator as a starting point, but the real gains come from tracking your actuals for a week and then re-sequencing. Start with a list of every customer, plot them on a map, and see how much back-tracking you can eliminate.

Route Calculator — FAQs

Common questions about milk delivery route costs and optimization.

How do I calculate milk delivery route cost?

Route cost = (Total distance ÷ Vehicle mileage) × Fuel price + (Time taken × Worker hourly cost). Divide by number of deliveries to get the cost per customer. Most urban milk delivery routes run ₹2–₹5 per delivery in fuel alone; adding a paid worker raises it to ₹8–₹15 per delivery.

What is a good time per delivery for milk distribution?

A tight urban apartment route can hit 1–1.5 minutes per drop (you know every door). A spread-out suburban route averages 2–3 minutes per drop. Rural routes with farm deliveries can take 4–6 minutes per drop. If you are taking more than 3 minutes per customer on a city route, route optimization can save you real money.

Is petrol or CNG cheaper for milk delivery?

CNG is roughly 40% cheaper per km than petrol at current Indian prices, but the vehicle cost is higher upfront. For routes above 40 km/day, a CNG vehicle pays back the premium within 18 months. For a small 10–20 km route, a fuel-efficient petrol two-wheeler is usually the most economical choice.

How can I reduce my milk delivery fuel cost?

Five levers: (1) cluster customers into tight geographic groups, (2) deliver in a single loop instead of back-tracking, (3) stop accepting far-flung customers that break your route, (4) shift to a more fuel-efficient or CNG vehicle, and (5) negotiate delivery slots so you can combine deliveries. A 20% reduction in daily distance usually saves 15–25% in monthly fuel.

What does the ROI column in the calculator show?

The ROI figure shows how much you could save monthly by optimizing your route — we assume a conservative 20% distance reduction from better clustering and sequencing. It is what a typical milkman saves after switching from memory-based delivery to a planned route.

Does DudhHisaab help with delivery routes?

DudhHisaab stores customer GPS locations (optional) and shows them in a clean list for each session. You can mark deliveries as done in sequence, skip vacation customers automatically, and export the list to any navigation app. Full route optimization is on the roadmap.