I know that the recruiters tell you what you want to hear. How long does it take to begin earning a decent wage..I imagine that during training you are simply team driving to learn some and bust your ### for the knowledge you receive from the trainer...all the while filling his\her pockets. what is the incentive for the trainer to let you go on your own? seems to me the better you get at helping out the trainer, the longer he\she would want to hang onto you, since you are making their job a little easier.
so how long until the decent cash starts coming in? right after the training period? two years later?
making a decent wage
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by HAMADOWN, Dec 17, 2011.
Page 1 of 2
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
How long ?? That depends on lot on you.
You have to choose the right company...first and foremost.
The typical company will run you at reduced wages for the first year. With several raises throughout that first year. Many will try to have you at .35 at the end of the first year. Others will wait longer.
It's my personal opinion, a beginning driver with zero accidents should be at .35 a mile within 6 months of his start date. That's not always the case. So it's up to you to insure you ask the right questions.
At many companies, it's a trade off. You'll run at a reduced per mile rate. But you'll run more miles than most of the top tier drivers. It'll balance out, you'll just have to work harder for it.
99% of the companies will deny that last paragraph.....flat out.tdcanterbury67 Thanks this. -
It'll take 2 years of starving with a BFI before you get a decent wage with a carrier that only hires experienced drivers
-
Some (BUT NOT MANY) first year drivers make 40K plus.
Most will never make that much, no matter how long they try.
Depends on what company you start with, and how hard you want to work !!! -
It depends on what you call a decent wage. First year earnings should be between $30-35,000. Second year you could earn $35-40,000. After that it will depend on you and the type of freight you haul. $30,000 is a liveable wage unless you are over burdened with debt. There are ways in which you can keep expenses down while on the road. If you eat every meal in a truck stop then you will lower your take home pay dramatically.
-
-
-
I see 40k mentioned a lot, but doesn't that really only come out to be around 10 bucks an hour give or take?
-
-
Wages are stagnant for the moment. They actually went down over the past 3 years, for many people.
That's why the companies continue to hammer this "driver shortage" myth. Once the experienced drivers see the economy turning. They'll bail for greener pastures if wages don't return to "normal". Companies are hoping to fill the trucks with enough new drivers to offset the loss of the older ones.
We're already seeing sign on bonuses exceeding $5000 for solo's and $10,000 for teams. Way more than they were just 5 years ago.
But this is an attempt to lure quality drivers into their ranks. Not MORE drivers.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 1 of 2