Concrete Mixer Trucks for Sale: Your Complete Buyer's Guide to the Las Vegas June 2026 Auction

Five concrete mixer trucks are heading to an absolute auction in Las Vegas this June! If you're in the market for commercial ready-mix equipment, this is worth your full attention.

Taylor & Martin is holding a major public auction on June 18, 2026, at their Las Vegas location, featuring 237 pieces of equipment, including five 2014 Peterbilt 365 concrete mixer trucks. All five come from the same commercial fleet, all run the same Cummins ISX 12 engine, and all go to the highest bidder with no minimums, no reserves, and no bid-ins.

Whether you're a ready-mix operator replacing aging trucks, a general contractor adding mixer capacity, or a fleet buyer looking for commercial-grade equipment at transparent auction pricing — this guide covers everything you need to evaluate these units, understand the auction format, and bid with confidence on June 18.


Auction Details — What You Need to Know First

Before getting into the equipment, here are the logistics:

Event Date: Thursday, June 18, 2026

Start Time: 9:00 AM Pacific

Bidding Format: Online Registration & Bidding Only

Total Items: 237 and more added everyday

Buyer's Premium: 6.5% (unless otherwise noted per lot)

Transaction / Internet Fees: None

Las Vegas Address: 7500 Las Vegas Blvd. North, Las Vegas, NV 89115

Las Vegas Phone: 402-719-9483

Vacaville, CA Address: 5419 Weber Road, Vacaville, CA 95687

Vacaville Phone: 402-941-1000

Toll-Free: 1-877-967-6450

Full Auction Listing Here

This is an online-only event with all registrations and bidding running through Taylor & Martin's platform. Take a moment to make sure you're registered and approved before June 18 rolls around.


What Is a Concrete Mixer Truck — And Who Needs One?

A concrete mixer truck, also called a transit mixer or ready-mix truck, is a purpose-built vehicle that combines cement, water, sand, and aggregate into fresh concrete and delivers it to job sites in a workable, ready-to-pour state. The rotating drum keeps the mix in continuous motion during transport, so it doesn't set before it reaches the pour location.

These trucks are essential for any construction operation that works with concrete at scale. If you're building roads, bridges, commercial structures, residential foundations, or public infrastructure, reliable mixer trucks aren't optional equipment - they're a core operational requirement.


Who Typically Buys Concrete Mixer Trucks at Auction?

    ● Ready-mix concrete producers expanding or refreshing their fleet

    ● General contractors managing large-scale residential or commercial builds

    ● Infrastructure and civil engineering firms working on government projects

    ● Equipment dealers and resellers are capitalizing on strong used equipment demand

    ● Regional fleet operators serving multiple job sites simultaneously


Market context: Infrastructure investment across the western United States has kept demand for concrete mixer trucks consistently strong. Las Vegas has seen sustained commercial and residential development activity, making this auction well-timed for buyers operating in or near Nevada.


The Peterbilt 365 — Built for This Work, Not Adapted for It

The Peterbilt 365 is a purpose-built vocational truck. It's not an over-the-road tractor that's been modified for job-site use - it's engineered from the frame up for demanding work like concrete mixing, where start-stop operation, high GVWR loads, and daily abuse are the norm rather than the exception.

     ● Heavy-duty frame rated for high gross vehicle weight handles a fully loaded 8-10 yard concrete drum without frame stress

     ● Vocational axle configuration matched to drum weight distribution reduces suspension and tire wear over time

     ● Tight turning radius for navigating crowded job sites, residential streets, and urban pour zones

     ● Durable cab construction built for daily working conditions - not highway comfort repurposed for sites


Cummins ISX 12 — Why This Engine Matters

Every one of these five units runs a Cummins ISX 12 producing 320 horsepower. The ISX 12 is one of the most recognized diesel engines in the heavy-duty vocational market, and its reputation comes down to a few practical advantages that matter directly to fleet operators:

     ● 12-liter displacement with high torque at low RPM- exactly what you need hauling a loaded drum up a grade

     ● One of the most widely serviced diesel engines in the U.S. - parts and technicians available nationwide

     ● Proven reliability in commercial fleet applications with documented multi-year service records

     ● Fuel-efficient combustion design that keeps operating costs in check over full work shifts

For buyers evaluating concrete mixer trucks, the ISX 12's aftermarket depth means lower risk. You're not buying an obscure powerplant with limited service options, you're buying one of the most common and well-supported diesel engines in the vocational segment.


Allison Automatic Transmission — The Industry Standard for Mixer Applications

Concrete mixer trucks operate in constant stop-and-go conditions at job sites - exactly the environment that destroys manual transmissions and clutches over time. Allison Automatic transmissions eliminate clutch wear entirely, reduce operator fatigue, and consistently result in lower long-term drivetrain maintenance costs. They're the preferred choice across the ready-mix industry for a reason.


Auction Pricing — What to Expect

Because this is an absolute auction with no minimums or reserves, the final price on each lot is set entirely by competitive bidding on June 18. No artificial floors are protecting the seller. The number you see when the hammer falls is what the market thinks that truck is worth on that day. When calculating your maximum bid, factor in the 6.5% buyer's premium. There are no transaction fees or internet fees on top. If you plan to transport the units, get a carrier quote before auction day so your bid reflects your true all-in cost. For buyers unfamiliar with Peterbilt 365 market values, review comparable listings on commercial truck listing sites before June 18 to calibrate your bidding. Doing this early will help you set a confident ceiling before the auction opens.


What to Check Before You Bid — Practical Checklist

1. Review the Condition Codes

Taylor & Martin assign condition codes to each lot. These are listed on individual equipment detail pages at taylorandmartin.com. Check them for every unit you're considering - especially for lots M-2 and M-5, where mileage is still awaiting verification. Watch for updates before June 18!

2. Download the Full Auction Catalog

The Las Vegas & Vacaville brochure and full catalog are available on the event page. These often include photos and additional unit details not shown in the standard listing view. Review them before auction day, not after.

3. Calculate Your True Max Bid

Your all-in cost = winning bid + 6.5% buyer's premium + transportation. Get a transport quote before the auction so your max bid reflects your actual budget, not just the hammer price.

4. Register Early — Don't Wait Until June 18 Morning

Registration and Approval to bid must be completed before the auction opens at 9:00 AM Pacific on June 18. The approval process requires submitting a PDF form (please allow at least a 24-48-hour buffer). If you try to register the morning of, you may miss your window.

5. Plan Transportation in Advance

All mixer trucks are located at 7500 Las Vegas Blvd. North, Las Vegas, NV 89115. Taylor & Martin has transportation partner resources on their site. Line up a carrier before you bid - not after you win.


Why Buy Construction Equipment at Absolute Auction?

Dealer lots and private-party transactions have their place, but absolute public auctions offer advantages that are hard to replicate elsewhere:

     ● No artificial price floors - absolute auction means the seller is committed to selling to the highest bidder, period

     ● Transparent competition - you see exactly what other buyers are willing to pay in real time

     ● Fleet-sourced equipment - commercial fleet consignments typically have more consistent maintenance history than private-party units

     ● No transaction or internet fees - the 6.5% buyer's premium is the only add-on

     ● Access to financing - Taylor & Martin's pre-approval program lets you know your budget before bidding starts


How to Register and Bid — Step-by-Step

1. Create a free account at taylorandmartin.com, or log in if you already have one

2. Download and complete the Approval to Bid PDF from the auction event page

3. Review the auction terms and conditions before the sale

4. Log in on June 18 before 9:00 AM Pacific and bid live

Questions before the auction? Contact the Las Vegas site directly at 402-719-9483, or reach Taylor & Martin's main line at 1-877-967-6450.

Nevada Buyers: All in-state Nevada buyers (non-dealer) should contact the Title Department at 1-877-967-6450 after completing a purchase for information on city, state, and county tax documents.


Frequently Asked Questions

1. What concrete mixer trucks are for sale at the Taylor & Martin Las Vegas auction?

Taylor & Martin is offering five 2014 Peterbilt 365 concrete mixer trucks at absolute auction in Las Vegas on June 18, 2026. All five units run Cummins ISX 12 engines (320 HP) with Allison Automatic transmissions, sourced from the same commercial fleet.

2. What makes the Cummins ISX 12 a good engine for mixer trucks?

The Cummins ISX 12 produces 320 horsepower from a 12-liter displacement, delivering high torque at low RPM — ideal for the loaded-drum operation and frequent grade climbing that concrete mixer trucks face. Its strongest practical advantages are its nationwide service network and parts availability, which reduce downtime risk for fleet operators.

3. Is Taylor & Martin a reputable auction house for construction equipment?

Yes. Taylor & Martin has operated in the heavy equipment auction industry for decades and is well-known among fleet operators, contractors, and equipment dealers for its absolute auction format and transparent bidding process. They specialize in commercial trucks and vocational equipment, run no bid-in auctions, and apply consistent condition codes to every lot.

4. What is the difference between a concrete mixer truck and a cement mixer?

The terms are often used interchangeably, but technically a cement mixer combines and mixes dry ingredients at the job site, while a concrete mixer truck (or transit mixer) transports pre-batched wet concrete in a rotating drum from a ready-mix plant to the pour location. The trucks in this auction are transit mixers — commercial-grade units built for ready-mix delivery operations.

5. Can I bid on concrete mixer trucks from outside Nevada?

Yes. This is an online-only auction — registration and bidding are available to buyers nationwide. If you win, you'll need to arrange transport from Las Vegas, NV. Taylor & Martin offers transportation partner resources on their site to help connect buyers with carriers experienced in heavy vocational equipment.

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