Route Plan Template (Tourenplan)
Free route plan template in PDF, Excel, and Word – stop sequence, time windows, and arrival times for daily planning by drivers and dispatchers.
Download the template for free
Free and without registration – commercial use included.
A route plan – German: Tourenplan – brings order to the driving day: it defines the sequence in which a vehicle visits its stops, which time windows apply, and which order belongs to each stop. With this free template you plan daily routes in a structured way – as a PDF for the clipboard or as an Excel sheet for dispatch.
What belongs in a good route plan?
A route plan is more than a list of addresses. For drivers and dispatch to work from the same picture, it needs these details – the template has a dedicated column for each:
- Date, vehicle, and driver of the route
- Stop sequence with customer, address, and particulars of the unloading point
- Time window per stop (earliest/latest)
- Reference to the order number, so every stop maps to exactly one order
- Planned and actual arrival and departure times – the difference is the basis for post-calculation
- Remarks (notification requirements, tail lift, on-site contact)
How do I plan a route manually?
Manual route planning follows a few simple rules:
- Time windows first. Fixed appointments set the frame of the route – all flexible stops arrange themselves around them.
- Cluster stops geographically. Work through districts or postcode areas one after another instead of criss-crossing the territory.
- Build in buffers. Loading and unloading times are almost always underestimated – 10 to 15 minutes per stop plus a traffic reserve is realistic.
- Avoid peak hours. Schedule inner-city stops for off-peak times and keep the longest leg out of rush hour.
Excel or route planning software?
For one vehicle with stable, recurring routes, the template works well – set up cleanly once, little changes. Its limits show as soon as several vehicles, short-notice orders, or conflicting time windows enter the picture: manual planning quickly turns suboptimal, and that costs real money in empty kilometres, missed time windows, and routes that exist only in the dispatcher's head. A transport management system plans routes automatically, checks time windows against each other, and shows every vehicle live on the map – that is exactly what we built the Maxmove TMS for.
Frequently asked questions
How many stops per route are optimal? There is no fixed number – stop density, dwell times, and driving-time limits decide. In urban distribution, 15 to 30 stops are common; for general cargo with long dwell times, far fewer. Plan so the last time window still holds even with half an hour of delay.
How do I estimate time windows realistically? Record actual arrival and departure times for a few weeks – that is what the template's actuals columns are for – and compare them with the planned values. Recurring deviations at certain customers or times of day feed into the next plan.
What about short-notice orders? Check which running route can absorb the new stop with the smallest detour – do not simply append it at the end. This is exactly where the paper plan hits its limit: the plan is printed, the driver is on the road, and replanning happens over the phone.
When does route planning software pay off? As a rule of thumb: from two to three vehicles with daily changing stops – or as soon as time windows regularly collide and dispatch spends more time replanning than planning.
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