Showing posts with label trucking cost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trucking cost. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

What Does Your Truck Need to Make For YOU to Actually Make $1,500 a Week?


What Does Your Truck Need to Make For YOU to Actually Make $1,500 a Week?

By Darius Goins | Truckers Shield


You're out here 70 hours a week. Away from your family. Missing birthdays, holidays, weeknights. Dealing with brokers who lowball you, shippers who waste your time, and a truck that never stops needing something.

And at the end of the month — after all of that — you look at your bank account and wonder where the money went.

You grossed $13,000 last month. You should be good. But you're not good. You've got $800 to your name and bills still coming.

Here's what nobody told you: grossing money and making money are two completely different things. And the gap between them — the part that disappears before it ever reaches your pocket — is what's keeping most owner-operators from building anything real.

The biggest piece of that gap? You forgot to pay yourself.

Not accidentally. Not because you're irresponsible. Because the way most drivers think about their business, their own paycheck was never part of the equation to begin with.

That ends today.


You Are Not Just the Driver. You Are an Employee of Your Own Business.

This is the mindset shift that changes everything.

When you operate as an owner-operator, you wear two hats. You are the owner of a trucking business — and you are also the driver that business employs. Those are two separate roles, and both of them deserve to be compensated.

The business has costs. The truck payment, insurance, fuel, maintenance, tires, permits — those are the business's bills. We covered how to calculate all of that in our cost per mile post.

But your labor — your time in that seat, your hours away from home, your physical and mental output — that is also a cost of doing business. It needs to be accounted for just like fuel and insurance.

When you don't account for it, what happens is this: you cover all the truck's bills, you have some money left over, and you call that your pay. Some months it's decent. Some months there's almost nothing. You have no idea what you actually made until it's already gone.

That's not running a business. That's surviving month to month and hoping it adds up.


So What Does $1,500 a Week Actually Require?

Let's build this from the ground up with real numbers.

$1,500 a week take-home. That's not an unreasonable ask — it's $78,000 a year, and you're running a commercial truck in one of the hardest jobs in America. That's the floor, not the ceiling.

But $1,500 a week take-home is not the same as $1,500 a week gross from the truck.

Here's why.

Your owner pay is taxable income.

As a self-employed owner-operator, you owe self-employment tax — 15.3% on 92.35% of your net earnings. On top of that you owe federal income tax and state income tax depending on where you live.

So if you want $1,500 in your pocket after taxes, the business needs to set aside closer to $1,950–$2,100 per week to cover your pay and the taxes on it. Let's use $2,000/week as our working number — that's $8,000/month that the business needs to generate for you personally, after all operating costs are paid.

Now add the truck's costs back in.

Using the example from our CPM post:

Cost CategoryMonthly Amount
Truck payment$2,200
Insurance$1,100
Fuel (11,000 miles @ $0.585/mile)$6,435
Maintenance reserve$1,650
Tire reserve$440
Permits/IFTA/UCR$200
ELD/phone$150
Tolls$220
Total Operating Costs$12,395

Add your owner pay requirement on top of that:

Total operating costs$12,395
Owner pay + taxes$8,000
Total the business must generate$20,395/month

At 11,000 miles a month, that means your truck needs to generate $1.854 per mile — every single mile, loaded and deadhead — just to cover operating costs and pay you $1,500 a week after taxes.

Let that sink in.

That's not profit. That's not growth. That's not an emergency fund. That's just break even with a paycheck.


The Number Most Drivers Are Actually Running At

Here's where it gets painful.

The national average rate per mile for dry van owner-operators has been hovering in the $1.80–$2.10 range depending on lane and season. Some weeks are higher. Some weeks are lower.

If you're averaging $1.90 a mile loaded and running 11,000 miles a month — but 2,000 of those miles are deadhead — your effective revenue per total mile is closer to $1.65.

At $1.65 effective RPM against a $1.854 break-even, you're running at a $2,244 monthly deficit before you ever look at your checking account balance.

You're not struggling because you're doing something wrong. You're struggling because the math was never explained to you.


What the Business Needs Beyond Your Paycheck

Here's the part that takes this one level further — and most drivers never get here because they're too busy trying to survive to think about it.

A healthy business doesn't just break even with a paycheck. It builds.

That means on top of operating costs and owner pay, your business should be setting aside:

  • Emergency / breakdown reserve — $500–$1,000/month minimum. When that turbo goes, you cannot afford to finance a repair on a credit card at 24% interest.
  • Tax reserve — beyond what you're setting aside for owner pay taxes, the business itself may owe taxes. Set aside 25–30% of every settlement into a separate account before you touch it.
  • Slow freight buffer — freight markets go soft. January, February, parts of summer. You need 60–90 days of operating costs in reserve to not panic-take bad loads when the market dips.

Add those in and the real number your truck needs to generate monthly to run a genuinely healthy business — not just survive — is closer to $22,000–$24,000/month at 11,000 miles.

That's a $2.00–$2.18 effective rate per mile on all miles driven. Not just loaded miles. All miles.

That's the number. Now you know what you're working with.


Why This Changes How You Look at Every Load

When you know what your truck needs to gross — truly needs, including your own pay — every load negotiation changes.

That broker offering $1.65 a mile on a 900-mile run with 150 miles of deadhead? You know immediately that's a money-losing move. Not a feeling. Not a gut check. The math tells you.

That load paying $2.20 a mile on a direct 1,100-mile run with 30 miles of deadhead? You know that's a win worth taking.

You stop making decisions based on whether a rate "sounds good." You make them based on whether the numbers work — for the truck and for you.

This is the difference between owner-operators who build something and owner-operators who grind forever and have nothing to show for it.


Know What You Need. Then Run It.

Before you accept the next load, you need two numbers in your head:

1. Your full cost per mile — truck costs, all of them, including the ones you've been forgetting.

2. Your owner pay requirement per mile — what the truck needs to generate above costs to put the paycheck you deserve in your pocket.

Add them together. That's your floor. Don't run below it.

The Quick Load Check tool at Truckers Shield will tell you in seconds whether a load clears your floor — free, no account required.

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And if you're ready to see the full picture — your real monthly breakeven, your profit per load with owner pay factored in, your tax liability on every settlement, and a Co-Driver AI that answers your financial questions in plain driver language —

👉 Start your free trial at truckersshield.net

You've been paying for the truck. It's time to start paying yourself.


Darius Goins is the founder of Truckers Shield and a 25-year trucking industry veteran with 2.5 million miles across every role — company driver, lease operator, owner-operator, and freight broker. He built Truckers Shield because he needed it and nothing like it existed.