All Terrain Cranes For Sale

     1 - 27 of 1,091 Listings
    High/Low/Average
    About All-Terrain Cranes

    All-terrain cranes are often capable of reaching highway speeds to get from one site to another, and are durable and powerful enough to tackle jobs both on and off the road.

    Read More (About All-Terrain Cranes)
    1 - 27 of 1,091 Listings

    Sort

    Applied Filters

    Applied Filters
    keywords
    Year
    serialNumberVIN
    Price
    Capacity
    Mileage
    Hours
    LiftHeight
    ActivationUTCDateTime

    1 - 27 of 1,091 Listings

    RentalYard LogoRent
    All
    Options

    Sort
    Upper Hours8,500
    Location: Holbrook, Massachusetts
    Seller: Hallamore Corporation
    Upper Hours8,740
    Location: Cocoa, Florida
    Seller: Beyel Brothers Crane & Rigging

    2013 LIEBHERR LTM1130-5.1

    All Terrain Cranes

    Premium Listing2013 LIEBHERR LTM1130-5.1 Used All Terrain Cranes for sale2013 LIEBHERR LTM1130-5.1 Used All Terrain Cranes for sale
    Call for price
    View Details
    Upper Hours9,899
    Location: Pasadena, Texas
    Seller: Erwin Crane
    Lift Capacity300 ton
    Location: Las Vegas, Nevada

    2026 TADANO AC 5.250L-2

    All Terrain Cranes

    Premium Listing
    Call for price
    View Details
    Upper Hours0
    Location: Jacksonville, Florida
    Seller: Renegar-Driggers Machinery Co., Inc.
    Serial Number3086120
    Location: Houston, Texas
    Seller: CraneWorks, LLC
    Featured Online Auction
     
     
    View Details
    View Buyer's Premium
    Auction Date:6/12/2026 10:30:00 AM (CDT)
    Serial Number1F9S2K439EL028794
    Location: Lake Elsinore, California
    Seller: Western Construction Auctions
    Upper Hours4,500
    Location: Newport News, Virginia
    Seller: Liebherr USA, Co
    Upper Hours10,700
    Location: Houston, Texas
    Seller: Liebherr USA, Co
    Upper Hours2,336
    Location: Bellevue, Ohio
    Seller: Evans Sales Inc.
    Lift Capacity150 ton
    Location: Mcdonald, Pennsylvania
    Seller: Moore Dodson Russell & Wilhite, P.C
    Upper Hours8,280
    Location: Lancaster, South Carolina
    Seller: Dixie Crane & Equipment Corp.
    Upper Hours4,083
    Location: Perkiomenville, Pennsylvania
    Seller: Enzo Paludi
    Upper Hours11,356
    Location: Bangor, Maine
    Seller: Black Bear Crane
    Upper Hours16,300
    Location: Williston, North Dakota
    Seller: Coach Truck & Tractor LLC
    Upper Hours14,300
    Location: Williston, North Dakota
    Seller: Coach Truck & Tractor LLC
    Upper Hours15,572
    Location: Nitro, West Virginia
    Seller: Maxim Crane Works
    Upper Hours19,000
    Location: Wilder, Kentucky
    Seller: Maxim Crane Works
    Upper Hours15,624
    Location: Indianapolis, Indiana
    Seller: Maxim Crane Works

    2026 TADANO AC 5.160-1

    All Terrain Cranes

    Featured Listing
    Call for price
    View Details
    Drive8WD
    Location: Pooler, Georgia
    Seller: Dozier Crane
    Upper Hours6,300
    Location: Stephenville, Texas
    Seller: Omnia Machinery US SALES

    2015 GROVE GMK5095

    All Terrain Cranes

    Featured Listing
    Call for price
    View Details
    Upper Hours8,482
    Location: Independence, Ohio
    Seller: ALL Crane

    2026 GROVE GMK5150XL

    All Terrain Cranes

    Featured Listing
    Call for price
    View Details
    Upper Hours1
    Location: Dundalk, Maryland
    Seller: MGX Equipment Services
    Upper Hours977
    Location: La Grange, Kentucky
    Seller: Omnia Machinery US SALES

    2012 GROVE GMK5165

    All Terrain Cranes

    Featured Listing
    Call for price
    View Details
    Upper Hours3,418
    Location: N/A, Pennsylvania
    Seller: QUALITY CRANES
    Upper Hours17,516
    Location: Omaha, Nebraska
    Upper Hours1
    Location: Dundalk, Maryland
    Seller: MGX Equipment Services

    About All-Terrain Cranes

    While some pieces of equipment are only suited for work under certain conditions, all-terrain cranes live up to their name by working both on and off the road. In fact, that’s what makes this versatile style of crane different from its counterparts. It has highway speed capabilities like a truck-mounted crane to easily move from one site to another, but it’s also rugged enough to go off-road and powerful enough to do the heavy lifting when it gets there.

    As its name implies, a road-transportable all-terrain crane can also navigate rough terrain to an extent using all-wheel or multi-wheel drive. Multiple steering axles and modes such as crab steering give it the mobility to maneuver into position on the jobsite, while a compact design allows it to fit into confined spaces. After deploying its outriggers, the two- to nine-axle crane uses either a hydraulic telescopic boom (and an optional jib) or a lattice boom to hoist heavy loads in a broad variety of lifting applications. Some all-terrain cranes, called “taxi cranes,” can bring all or most of their counterweights along with them, negating the need for additional transport vehicles.


    Liebherr LTM1110-5.2 All Terrain Crane

    Capacities & Hook Heights

    Grove, a Manitowoc company, is a prominent manufacturer of all-terrain cranes. Its GMK line shows a typical range of capabilities these mobile cranes offer.

    At the compact end of the Grove GMK product range is the three-axle GMK3050-3, which can lift a maximum of 55 tons (50 metric tons). The GMK3050-3 has 131 feet (40 meters) of main boom, and it can reach a maximum tip height of 167 ft (51 m).

    On the upper end of Grove’s all-terrain lineup is the GMK7550, which has a lift capacity of 550 t (450 mt), a main boom length of 197 ft (60 m), and a max tip height of 448 ft (136 m).

    Other models are even more powerful, such as the Tadano AC 9.700-1, which is capable of lifting 800 t (700 mt) and has a 497-ft (147-m) max hook height. Liebherr’s mammoth LTM 11200-9.1 goes even further with a 1,500-t (1,200-mt) lift capacity and a 617-ft (188-m) max tip height.

    Features

    Current all-terrain cranes come with a variety of features, depending on the manufacturer. All-wheel and multi-wheel steering have become commonplace, as have tilting cabs and video cameras on key components and blind spots. Modern all-terrain cranes support telematics and fleet management systems, and many manufacturers offer related mobile apps.

    Ever-evolving control systems such as Manitowoc’s Crane Control System and Liebherr’s LICCON make cranes safer and easier to use, even for inexperienced operators. Several all-terrain cranes feature real-time load charts that update on the fly according to boom and outrigger position. Speaking of outriggers, manufacturers such as Liebherr and Tadano offer variable deployment lengths to fit irregular spaces on cramped worksites.

    Finally, variable counterweight positioning systems are gaining ground in the mobile crane industry. In the all-terrain sector, for example, Liebherr’s VarioBallast is a hydraulic slewing ballast platform that allows counterweights to be moved inward for extra tailswing clearance or outward for a greater radius and lift capacity.

    Find The Right All-Terrain Crane

    You’ll find new and used all-terrain cranes on the market from current and former manufacturers including Demag, Grove, Liebherr, Tadano, Tadano Faun, and Terex.