Hmm, interesting. I could make $60,000 a year making $15 an hour if I work 80 hours a week but who wants to do that? You’re driver making $80,000 a year is working a LOT harder than the guy making $55,000. I’d prefer make more for my work than do more work.
I read back through this thread and there were a couple people that told you 45ish which is where you are. I personally don’t see where your stubs are much help but if you feel better more power to ya.
Flatbed Wages
Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by Feanor, May 27, 2017.
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snowman_w900, cke, TripleSix and 1 other person Thank this.
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If hard work is a deterrent then Flatbedding might not be the best job to get in to.
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snowman_w900, cke, Ruthless and 1 other person Thank this.
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You can't honestly expect drivers to reveal what they make or what they are paid.
That is personal information and varies among drivers as well as companies.
Drivers at the same company may even be paid differently. Now with that being said, I'll give you some information as best I can based on 15 years of flatbed experience.
1. In regards to pay. Just being brand new to the game, your first two years are not going to pay a tremendous amount of money. Until you get some miles under your belt and several hundred loads, you would be unrealistic to expect huge pay checks.
Initially, especially during your training phase, you can expect to make somewhere between .32 and .35 cents a mile. Once you complete your initial phase of training, which would include proving yourself as a driver, learning how to secure a variety of loads with straps or chains, learning the correct way to tarp loads and so on, it would not be realistic to go up to about .40 cents a mile. I currently average, depending on load, between .54 and .62 pm.
As a company driver you can also expect to earn 25-35 dollars for the tarp pay and the stop pay. Companies are pretty cheap in this regards.
Some companies, however; will put you on a percentage between 25 and 75 depending on the company and the type of freight. If its a specialized company with several dedicated routes, you can expect to be up in the mid range. The percentage works primarily off of the total paid on the load and doesn't breakout the accessory pay.
2. As far as how a company pays depends on the company.
Some companies pay each week while others will pay every two weeks, generally around the 5th and the 20th.
Pay is based off of truck miles in most cases, which is generally the short miles from zip code to zip code.
Depending on which system they are using to calculate the miles, the actual miles versus the paid miles can average between 4% and 8% difference. The most accurate system that some companies are using is the ASA 400 and runs at about 3.8% difference.
Other companies that run local or regional will either pay by the hour or actual hub miles. So it really depends on whether or not you run over the road or dedicated local/regional.
3. Total miles ran per week has a lot of variables to consider.
It all comes down to the load, the company your loading at, and where the load is going.
With flatbed, in most cases, the loads are generally ready when you arrive. Very rarely do I have to sit and wait on the load.
The biggest determent is the time it takes to get loaded. If your doing loads like lumber, steel, or aluminum, the loads go on pretty quick. The time comes when its time to secure and/or tarp the load.
With equipment like machines, farm equipment, Cat and John Deere, it's usually just chain and go.
If, however; the load is oversized, then there's the extra time of measuring the load, calling into get permits (which are very route specific depending on the load), time management and so on.
Right now I'm in a heavy haul division and all of my loads are oversized or heavy.
If you run hard, don't waste a lot of time lolly gagging at truck stops, drag your butt, you can easily expect to run around the 2500 miles a week mark on average. 2500 miles a week depends on whether your truck is governed or not and whether its a standard legal load or a permitted oversize load.
I have had some weeks I ran less because of loads or restrictions and I have had weeks where I have run more. My lowest was only 875 because of countless delays on an oversize, my best was 3700 because everything went right.
4. In regards to time off. That again is going to depend a lot on the company that you work for.
Every company has a different way of calculating time off and vacation time off.
I like you am single. I see my house about once every 6 months, so the rest of the time I am running.
But when I do go home, it's generally for 10 days. I take 5 days of accrued time off and 5 days of Paid time off(vacation).
The other factor to consider, is where you live in relation to the lanes your company runs, and how difficult is it for them to accommodate your time off request. If you choose to take time off on the lane, maybe do a little sight seeing, visit some old friends, maybe make some new friends, your time off request usually gets approved fairly easy.
In closing, I hope that this has helped in some way. With 15 years of flatbed, over 2,5 million miles, and more than 500 over size loads, I can tell you, as a company driver my low after expenses and benefits was around 49,000 and my high was around 68,000. When I was an owner operator, my low after expenses and benefits was around 87,000 and my best high was 182,000.
With all things considered, flatbed is definitely the way to go. I wouldn't want to change anything.Feanor Thanks this. -
Get some experience and if you still want to do flatbed you can move to a better company. -
..... the only job I ever got was easier than flat bedding was a blow job.
OP you asked a question about pay at the start, most people didn’t tell you anything. The answers you did get gave you a pay range—-
You’re coming back 18 months later to tell us that you fall directly in the pay range.… Is there something else I’m missing?
I aint been an employee in quite a while, for the most part it seems to me people get about what they’re worth. If somebody going to tell you that they get 15 bucks an hour to run a flatbed, you can bet that’s what they’re worth.
You can nail down every dime and nickel, usually all comes out in the wash at big carriers.
If you don’t love it, it won’t be enough no matter how much it is.snowman_w900, TripleSix, stwik and 4 others Thank this. -
Why? Because I do not have, and have never had any interest in the opinions of strangers on the internet. To be frank, if I was intentionally TRYING to collect the most disparate, subjective, inaccurate information I could on the subject, that would probably have been my first approach. A poor driver who made 30k their first year could easily say 30k and believe it. A better driver might say 40k. A local or regional driver may have a completely different number. This is of no value to anyone.
What I DID request was statistically backed FACTS and NUMBERS from a range of drivers, including factors I considered relevant, which could be cross-compared and analyzed by an astute observer to isolate what may be relevant to themselves, and draw their own conclusions. That way I could examine the data, and form the only opinion that would mean anything to me - my own.
In retrospect, I see that this was a naive prospect, not due to the concept itself, but due to the nature of our society, and the sensitivity about the subject of our incomes. Personally I could care less what anyone knows or does not know about my income, but I seem to be in the minority in that regard. Thus why this thread was doomed from the start. The only reason I have revisited it (since you ask) is because I believe firmly in "Do unto others as you would have done to thyself", and I hope that someone in the same position I was in at the start can benefit from this info.adayrider Thanks this. -
snowman_w900, cke, PoleCrusher and 3 others Thank this.
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Me: How much did you guys make last year? Factual numbers please.
Response: You can expect to make X amount.
Me: Thanks but that wasn't the question.
Response: That info will be useless to you.
Me: I would like to see it anyway so people can decide that for themselves.
Response: Decline to share that.
Me: Fair enough. Here is mine for what it is worth.
Does that make sense?
Nobody can tell a new driver what they will make. A driver with access to a range of current incomes from active drivers along with details relevant to their situation could make their own opinion based on the data. That is the difference.
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