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
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.