I work for owner that has contract with Fedex. 6am-6pm M-friend. Go to the Fedex yard, check-in, get into my 18foot truck and go. 110-120 stops 220-250 packages + 14-20 pickups 300-400 packages. What is he making off of me weekly?
the fish are biting.
I could probably tell pretty closely what the income side of the equation is but depending on where you are and what your pay is and applicable taxes and fees, there is no way to tell what his profit is.I work for owner that has contract with Fedex. 6am-6pm M-friend. Go to the Fedex yard, check-in, get into my 18foot truck and go. 110-120 stops 220-250 packages + 14-20 pickups 300-400 packages. What is he making off of me weekly?
I could probably tell pretty closely what the income side of the equation is but depending on where you are and what your pay is and applicable taxes and fees, there is no way to tell what his profit is.
that is not my experience. The piececount has to stay astronomical to make any money at all with those. Most profitable are the extremely dense 200 stop 400 package routes. The only good thing about straight truck route is that anyone with a strong back can do them.Most of the Ground straight truck drivers I know are flat-rated (salary) at $100 above the going rate for regular Ground drivers, which is around $600 per week. Most of them have shelving built-in, and can carry a lot of packages. My guess is that these are the most profitable routes based on piece-count alone, and that the contractor does very well on them.
On my route, there is a ground driver in a straight truck, who handles all the bulk stops. He is also the owner.Most of the Ground straight truck drivers I know are flat-rated (salary) at $100 above the going rate for regular Ground drivers, which is around $600 per week. Most of them have shelving built-in, and can carry a lot of packages. My guess is that these are the most profitable routes based on piece-count alone, and that the contractor does very well on them.
$750-taxes=$610 weekly. Now that peek is over I'm running 100 deliveries, 240 packages with 15-18 pickups 200-300 packages, so total of 115 stops.Most of the Ground straight truck drivers I know are flat-rated (salary) at $100 above the going rate for regular Ground drivers, which is around $600 per week. Most of them have shelving built-in, and can carry a lot of packages. My guess is that these are the most profitable routes based on piece-count alone, and that the contractor does very well on them.
Highest profit are trucks with low miles. Go out full with a lot of stops like bbsam said. And come back full with medium/smaller sized shippers.
500-900 weekly depending on the workload. You're in the normal range... Whats your average hours? 8-10 hours? 115 stops is not very heavy so you are making a fair amount. (Fair as in not working more than the average driver for that wage). Of course that's just a guess. Lots of variables.I just want to know what others drivers for contractors get paid, to see if he is playing me.
$750-taxes=$610 weekly. Now that peek is over I'm running 100 deliveries, 240 packages with 15-18 pickups 200-300 packages, so total of 115 stops.
500-900 weekly depending on the workload. You're in the normal range... Whats your average hours? 8-10 hours? 115 stops is not very heavy so you are making a fair amount. (Fair as in not working more than the average driver for that wage). Of course that's just a guess. Lots of variables.
750/40 = 18.75.
At 12.50 per hour add an additional 30-40 percent for a full benefits package and his hourly would be 16.25-17.50.
So is 18.75 per hour a fair wage or 12.50 per hour plus full benefits?
That's based off his workload.