Two hundred livelihoods are about to disappear. A once-booming trucking titan that emblazoned its logo on AFL jerseys has suddenly fallen silent, leaving freight stranded and families terrified. As XL Express collapses into voluntary administration, customers scramble to reclaim goods, and entire industries brace for a logistics vacuum that could choke supply chains and shat… Continues…
For 35 years, XL Express was woven into the daily rhythm of the east coast, moving everything from vital parts to everyday parcels between Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. Its trucks became a familiar sight, its brand powerful enough to sit proudly on Brisbane Lions AFL guernseys. Now, behind depot fences, hundreds of workers wait for answers that may never come, while administrators from FTI Consulting pick through the wreckage, testing whether anything can still be saved.
The collapse is more than a corporate failure; it is a rupture that ripples through small businesses, national retailers and anxious customers wondering if their orders will ever arrive. Distribution centres are being cleared, collections hurriedly arranged, but the broader fear lingers: if a company this established can fall so fast, what other quiet, unseen cracks are already forming in Australia’s supply chain?