So as a new O/O and now that i got my first check under me i figure i will post some numbers from my first month includeing the truck purchase here for any new O/O to give you some food for thought. Keep in mind I went into this with what i thought was a HUGE oh #### fund and it was STILL only just enough money to make my first month. Numbers are rounded up for ease of reading. Expenses: Truck down payment $16,000 Trailer lease $4200 First truck and trailer payment $3000 Tows $2000 Wetkit $6000 Batterys and battery box rebuild $1200 Removing roof ferring $600 fixing window switch $250 APU repairs $2200 Fuel $5500 Incorperation fees: $1500 (includes laywer to insure everything was legal) taxes and licenseing $3200 Davie4 tool to read and clear idiot lights $1400 Tools $1000 Required equipment (triangles, fuses, oil, 5th wheel grease, ect) $200 ELD $1200 (device+plus tablet+subscription+data plan) Drive cam $400 CB radio $250 Inverter replacment $1100 Steer tires $1700 Drive tire $390 Man door for trailer: $1400 Tarp bows: $250 NoX sensors $350 due to warranty 5th wheel rebuild $850 replacment hoses and body work due to failed 5th wheel $1200 Weight guages so i dont end up illegal $1700 new mattress $600 hydraulic fluid for wet kit $900 Prepaid legal fees $350 Accounting software and hardware (laptop quickbooks scanner) $800 Misc other items like brooms and storage boxes $150 Total $61,840 Profits: Pay: $2250 Sold roof ferring: $600 Total: $2850 Thats right i made all of $2800 to offset almost $62,000 in startup costs. Granted a huge part of that was my down payments and due to the 3 to 4 week delay on getting my first paycheck, and is further compunded by my going into specialized work where i NEED certain equipment. But for those of you thinking $30K is enough i want you to reconsider that stance VERY hard. Trucks break, equipment fails, bad luck happens. Being an O/O aint easy and even going into this prepared for the worst i still got bent over in my first month.
wow. I don’t even know how to respond to that. $2,850 revenue and $5,500 in fuel. You may want to look into some aerodynamics.
Keep in mind that is over 4 weeks of working and includes almost 1700 deadhead miles the week before i actully started working getting my truck and trailer from half way across the country from each other as well as the initial 300 gallons just to fill the bloody tanks up as they had literally less then 10 gallons in them when i bought it so there is 1k right there. Then ive done about 9ish k miles this month while actully working or around 550-600 miles a day not counting the 4 days of downtime getting stuff fixed and the 200 odd miles deadheading to do that. i would need to go through quickbooks to check exact milage though. Besides thats actully pretty good for end dump work. Most rigs i know of that do this fall in the 3-5 range while mines running around 6.5-7 average total. First check was so low due to only haveing 2 short deliverys on the settlement and having to pay my initial insurance and tag costs from it anyway. Next one should be a lot better now that im past the 4 week delay and i will start actully getting decent money.
Hay as long as i can avoid my 5th wheel literally falling off the truck again ill be good i think. Next check SHOULD be about 4k after fuel.
That’s what I with I had done when the engine blew in my second truck. i had a turbo disintegrate and then oil from the turbo line fed the engine into a runaway. WheeeeeeeeeEEEEEEE ——- boom . Split two pistons in half , bent two rods , broke the crankshaft. I got my engine replaced In Five weeks which I guess was actually pretty fast, but the lost revenue was a killer. truck was paid for , I financed the first truck , actually. Did a lease purchase with a honest company who had plenty of freight and didn’t pay a percentage, they paid a combo of daily, mileage and stops, with a fuel surcharge if the fuel went up, and detention pay after three hours. This was in the late 90s I was earning $1000 a month pre tax at my job, and made $5500 profit the first month driving the cabover international 9670. Wrecked the cabover with ONE payment left, but I had saved enough earning $5000 a month but still used to living on $800 a month to easily put $8k cash with the insurance payment for the wrecked one to pay cash for another used truck. Which is the one that had the engine runaway. But I should have just found another good used truck and been back in business in a Couple of days.
Because there’s not enough profit to make up for the risk. The best passive income verses risk, is real estate . Either a house or joining in a syndicated apartment complex purchase, where 10 or 12 or 15 people all put in $30-75k each for the down payment. And take shares of the profit equal to their percent of down payment.
I bought a couple trucks in the late 90's. Was an owner op for 10 years. It was good to me. That was then. I was looking to do it again when I retire but the truck I want is $200,000 so it's just a dream. I wouldn't go back into the buisness without a 389 pete or kw. Keeping in mind it's not for the money, it's just get paid to travel to certain areas when I want to go and trucking is in my blood
Yep You could actually make decent money in the late 80s thru the late 90s in 95 I was grossing $1.25 a mile. Fuel was around a Buck a gallon , insurance wasn’t outrageous, a pretty nice used truck as long as it wasn’t a 389 Pete or W900, was about $15k you could literally borrow or pay $15k cash for a truck , lease on to some place that had freight and all O/Os , no company drivers to compete with, and clear $1200-1600- 1800 a week after all expenses easily.