I started expediting on my own with Panther in 2007. I had 300 dollars to my name and a cargo van. I've been through three cargo vans since 2007 and a lot of maintenance and repairs, a major medical illness, and building and selling a small expedite company. I ended the business last year with 15k in the bank. I'd be in better shape if I hadn't sold my van for a low price a few months back, but the engine oil pressure was 25 on the highway with the manual oil pressure gage hooked up to the block.
I couldn't justify putting a new engine and more money into a truck what will be 10 years old in a couple more months. This job is like gambling. Sometimes you have to hold your chips, sometimes you have to fold your cards, and sometimes you have to cash out completely and walk away. I'm still contemplating getting back into the game next year if things get better load wise, and if my health continues to improve. I pretty much paid all of my bills, stayed in some pretty nice hotel rooms, ate at some good restaurants, and had a good time for the most part when I was driving my van.
I never got rich, never had healthcare, never invested in a retirement account, but there isn't really a lot of money leftover after expenses to do such things. All you're going to net as a cargo van driver is 25-30 thousand dollars a year. Always keep five thousand in savings for maintenance, breakdowns, and vehicle replacement. Always keep another five thousand in checking for the day to day operations of the business. Always keep at least enough money in cash in your van to be able to drive home from any part of the country if things get bad for you out on the road.
Some people in my family would trip when they saw that I had 10 thousand dollars just sitting there in a bank account. There were like you should be living it up. Then I had to explain to them that what we do is not like a regular job. I have to save my money for different scenarios and for the lien times. That is how I've survived through 1 repossession, 1 blown engine, and now another van that has bit the dust.
I consider myself to be a great chess player. But you aren't going to get rich doing this job. The rates have been on the decline for quite some time now despite the fact that expenses are going up minute by minute. It really comes down to a lifestyle choice. Do you want to make 1600 a month working a nine to five job for 10 bucks an hour, or do you want to drive a cargo van and net 2000 dollars a month and take 6 weeks off each year?
The only benefit that the nine to five job will give you is possibly employer paid healthcare, and you would be putting money into you social security account. That is only a good thing if social security will actually be there by the time you retire. Other than those two things, the cargo van might very well be the better of the two choices. Good luck in your next venture Acquitted!