Swift pay is it legit?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by mav100, Jul 7, 2023.
Page 2 of 3
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
$1,800 per week is running some serious miles, especially if you are just starting out at the bottom of the pay scale.
Since freight is generally slow these days, I don't think it is likely.
But, you could do the math for yourself.
What cpm would you be at, and how many miles would it take to gross that much?
If you were making 50 cpm you would need to run 3600 miles.
That would be averaging about 515 miles per day, 7 days a week.
That simply will not happen in the real world.aussiejosh, mav100, Stonehjl and 2 others Thank this. -
If you are regional out of CA it means you are in the western 13 states. It would be doubtful if they could get you home for every 34. That seems more like a local or close in dedicated type of thing.
If you are regional and running hard enough to require a 34, it is taken where ever your hours run out. -
New driver isn't going to average $1800/week anywhere. You'll be lucky if you can average $1000/week.
Recruiter words are always misleading. Make recruiter put you in contact with a new driver on the same account & ask him the describe pay, conditions, schedule, etc.
Ignore company web site & recruiter. It's like asking a pimp if his working girl is goodcat her job. -
How would anybody want to work for a company that crawls up your intestines and lives their? JHC, you get points, penalized, get your birthday taken away? Goodness gracious me. I refuse to believe drivers put up with this.
mav100 Thanks this. -
I applied to CA Swift days ago with 4 years of experience. Said $1500-$1700 a week. Then sent me this number in pic. I calculated it as $18/h. Base mileage rate $0.43/m
Last edited: Jul 9, 2023
mav100 Thanks this. -
To clarify tho the recruiter said I would be driving just in California exclusively. They have options for over the road too but could do just California as well and be home every week. For my 34.
Still don’t know if that’s legit and if I’d be making enough. If driving exclusively in Cali is difficult or how difficult it is on a scale of 1-10. I’ve been thru some pretty bad traffic here already but don’t know where they want me to deliver here. It’s been difficult to get any real answers from the recruiter. It’s mostly cut and paste emails I get and my actual questions ignored..Moosetek13 Thanks this. -
Do you have a recommendation working for another company as a new driver? Only 20K miles experience. No issues/problems tho. Don’t know how to back yet barely. That’s where I’m at. Trying to make the best pay possible. I am out of Southern California. Could move to Las Vegas potentially relatively easily for a good job out of there as well.
I may start a new thread asking this very question.
Thanks very much for your feedback! I appreciate it a lot! -
@mav100 --
Your pay as a new driver is based very largely on your experience as a driver (or the lack thereof).
Thus -- it's very likely that your paychecks will be rather lackluster for a while -- until you later build up some real "seat time".
It's just part of "the grind" of being a new driver -- your experience will pretty much suck for the first year to 18 months -- no matter where you drive (or what carrier takes you on).
This is especially true in the current freight market. It also explains in part why the first-year dropout rate for new drivers is so high (80-90%).
Suggestion: with all due respect -- you may well have to "embrace the suck" for a while (to borrow an expression from the military).
Don't feel bad -- I had to do the same....
Also: job-hopping as a brand new driver will very likely not yield the desired results you seek.
Carriers right now are tightening their hiring criteria.
Unless you are fired or furloughed -- best to stay put, if at all possible.
Footnote: I don't just talk the talk -- I walked the walk. I stayed at my first employer (Schneider) for a bit less than 2 years.
-- Lual -
mav100 Thanks this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 2 of 3