A railcar owned by the railroad on whose tracks it currently operates. System cars are available for general loading and are managed as part of the railroad's own fleet. When system cars travel on another railroad, they become foreign cars and earn car hire for the owning road.
A railcar owned by a shipper, leasing company, or third party rather than by a railroad. Private cars are used by the owner to transport their own goods or are leased to shippers for dedicated use. The owning railroad receives car hire when private cars travel on foreign lines.
A railcar that is operating on a railroad other than the one that owns it. Foreign cars generate car hire obligations from the operating railroad to the owning railroad. Railroads track foreign car counts carefully to manage their hire obligations and fleet balance.
A railcar that is currently on the railroad that owns it. Home cars generate no car hire for the owning railroad. Returning a car to its home road eliminates the daily hire expense.
A compensation system under which a railroad pays a daily or mileage-based fee to the car owner when using foreign-owned or privately owned equipment. Car hire rates are established under AAR rules and are intended to recover the owner's fixed and variable car costs. The system balances car supply across the national rail network.