Cargo Van Owners' CPM

terryandrene

Veteran Expediter
Safety & Compliance
US Coast Guard
We’ve had a lot of cost per mile discussion on EO lately and we have seen some differing opinions on the most appropriate methodology for determining a truck owner’s cost per mile. I’d like to share my opinion on cost per mile determinations, as I do it for my business. Perhaps I can help at least one person simplify the process. Make no mistake about it, a person that does not know their cost per mile will not know a profitable run from an unprofitable run Not to say you should never take an unprofitable run; there are reasons for doing so, but not to be discussed here.

For people new to this business, there are two categories of Cost Per Mile (CPM). Forecast CPM and actual CPM. I call it forecast CPM because a new person has no truck business operation history upon which to base an actual cost per mile. After a year or more, a forecast CPM should be modified to include actual expenses and create a more realistic total figure. CPM figures are fluid in nature because of the variable costs, like fuel and insurance that change from year to year. For the purpose of this post, I will not consider income taxes and will assume a van operator is a sole proprietor and not a corporation.

I’ve only operated cargo vans, so that will be the subject of my example. For the purpose of my example, we must make some assumptions. We will assume that the van will have no major accidents and the owner will not be faced with any cargo damage claims. A typical cargo van will provide good service for five years at 100,000 miles per year, so we’ll start there. I know that most vans will be in service for at least 6 or 7 years, but I like to start out with the total of all estimated costs for five years.

$ 30,000 Cost of new van purchase.

$ 3,318 Finance cost at 6% for 48 months

$ 3,000 Outfitting van with securement devices, sleeper and wall materials, safety equipment, GPS and other electronic devices.

$ 250 Van State registration at $50 annual

$ 350 State issue CDL including HAZMAT background check

$ 500 Carrier start-up costs for signage and Qualcomm install

$ 7,800 QualComm or other device lease at $30 weekly for 5 years

$ 5,100 Van bobtail insurance at an avg $85 monthly

$ 6,500 Work Accident Insurance at $25 weekly

$ 175 Biennial Physicals for medical certificate at $70 each

$ 200 Annual random drug tests

$100,000 Fuel - Assume 500,000 miles at 15 mpg at $3 per gallon

$ 2,500 Oil changes at Jiffy Lube every 5000 miles

$ 8,000 Preventive and corrective maint after warranty expires

$ 1,500 Tolls at $300 annually

$ 4,500 Telephone service at $75 monthly

$ 2,600 Laundry at $10 weekly

$ 2,600 Do-it-yourself van wash at $10 weekly

$ 500 Office supplies at $100 annually

The total of these estimated figures is an approximation of a cargo van operating expenses during a five year period. The total of $179,393 may be reduced by the resale value of the van which will be about $4000. The cost to own and operate a cargo van for five years, using the above example, is $175,373. That sounds staggering doesn’t it. Well, it equates to 35 cents per mile.

The above exercise is just the beginning. An owner must continually massage the numbers to reflect the actual costs of the variable expenses. Add or delete any expense categories and substitute figures to suit your particular situation. Adjustments may also be made for operations exceeding five years.
 
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fastrod

Expert Expediter
Great post. Now assuming most vans average at least 80 cpm with a 10 cpm fsc a little math puts the van owners yearly gross at $55,000. Not bad money for driving a van.
 

LDB

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
I may be wrong but a good bit of that 100k would be deadhead and I doubt vans everage 80cpm plus 10fsc for all miles.
 

louixo

Veteran Expediter
Charter Member
I think what Terry did here was give a good barometer of the approximate costs of owning and operating the same van for 5 years. There is no way to come up with an exact figure. What happens if you need major repairs that you have to pay for? If the price of fuel fluctuates?, and on and on. As he mentioned there are variables. I always generalized my "D" unit at 50 cpm. Your operating costs go on at the same rate empty or loaded, so to simplify I just plugged in total revenue to the truck, and divided by the number of miles driven for that dispatch. From there, I decide whether to take a load or not. The choice of taking the load also has important variables, that one has to think about. It`s not all about the profit margin on that one run. You have to think about where it`s going to put you, what day of the week you deliver, etc. I allow the profit margin to also fluctuate, in my decision making. I assumed everyone was doing it that way until I read some posts form people that just used a cutoff figure, no if`s and`s or but`s. I think that`s wrong, but I can only speak for myself.
 

dhalltoyo

Veteran Expediter
Wow!

I guess my wife is correct...I am cheap. I always say frugal....but...

$5,000 for laundry and truck washes seems very high, but I get by the house more often than most due to my location. I have a brush with liquid soap in the handle that connects to the garden hose. I'll do a load of clothes while I am washing off the van. I can accomplish both tasks in 30 minutes, so I do save a lot in that respect.

I am running at approximately 24 cpm.

I know Terry keeps very good records and I completely trust his numbers as they are based on the way he operates as a team unit.

Thank you for being a help to others.
 

LDB

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
I think Terry's example is excellent. I don't count cell phone or laundry in truck operating expenses because I'd be paying those regardless of what I did. I do write them off but just don't consider them as part of cpm. Terry's way is definitely right for him and I may be wrong but that's just how I do it.

I keep Streets and Trips open on my computer with my current location marked. When I get a load offer I can input the shipper and cons zip codes and get a pretty accurate estimate of miles d/h to shipper and loaded. I compare loaded to paid to be sure they're similar. I also see where I'd wait on the next load and how much d/h that is. Once I have all that I can figure out what it's actually making and then do as mentioned and factor in what day I'll be there. I also look at the time of the load offer. If I'm in a decent spot and the offer is at 1032 and a marginal offer I might gamble and decline with hopes of a better offer later in the day.
 

terryandrene

Veteran Expediter
Safety & Compliance
US Coast Guard
As I implied, accurate CPM computations require constant manipulation to maintain any validity. You'll notice I assumed a van operator would be on the road 52 weeks, nonstop, for five years. If you are away from home only 70% of the year then some of the variable costs can be changed accordingly. If you stay in a hotel, on occasion, add a hotel line item. If you wash your "work" clothes or truck at home, adjust the cost of washing them but do not eliminate that line item because laundry and truck washes are legitimate expenses, no matter where the work is accomplished; water and soap ain't free.


I intentionally leave food out of my computations because we have to eat anyway and I don't care to complicate the formula by determining the difference between home cooked and restaurant food. We spend far more money on food at home than we spend on the road. If you think you need to include food in CPM computations, do so. Hygienic items like toothpaste and Q-Tips are also not included in my CPM computations. Rule #1 is: There is no rule, just common sense.
 
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piper1

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
Terry, you have it figured out better than some of the trucking companies I've worked for!!! Great post!!!

I'm amazed at the amount of companies and O/O's who work the other way, They think that $1.35 a mile is good money so the profit will take care of itself. Then fuel or insurance goes up and they realize too late that that $1.35 doesn't go very far any more, or that $1.35 doesn't cut it if you go from pulling a tandem trailer to pulling a 4 axle with 20,000 lb more.

I always broke it down like so, CPM fixed (all your expenses that are there whether you run or not), CPM fuel, CPM wage, CPM maintenance (including tires), and CPM ownership (depreciation costs), separated because it is a Canadian tax thing and it varies on the exchange rate when you bought the truck). By breaking it down it was easier to pinpoint why costs went up or down, and it made the people responsible for each one more aware of their part of the deal.

Bottom line, know what it is and be real about it!
 
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RichM

Veteran Expediter
Charter Member
Yeah but lets say you buy 3 boxes of Q Tips a year. Each box has 100 so if you use 62 for the truck then 62% of the cost should be factored into your CPM equation. A while back someone claimed that he kept count of Q Tips used for personal use and business use. I think that is taking it to the extreme and might cause red lights to go on when that tax return gets processed.
 

LDB

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
How about if we drop Q-tips from the discussion and just focus on the good thread Terry has going without the needless stuff.
 

terryandrene

Veteran Expediter
Safety & Compliance
US Coast Guard
Simplicity for a newcomer with a first truck was my target audience and that is the reason for my not using the OOIDA spreadsheet.

The OOIDA spread sheet uses the annual total of truck payments. When the truck is paid for, like the trailer in their example, the payments would show zero and skew the real cost per mile. I prefer to forecast the life cycle cost of the truck, and the anticipated mileage ,and modify as needed. If, as I indicated, the cargo van is paid-up in four years, the CPM doesn't go down after the last payment. I think cost over the life cycle is even more important when you consider many folk enter this biz with a used $11,000 GMC van and others enter with a $50,000 Sprinter. If either paid cash, it wouldn't show on the OOIDA sheet during the out years. The difference BTW is 2.2 cents for that GMC and 10.0 cents.
 

Falligator

Expert Expediter
My van had 109,000 miles on it on January 1, 2007
Total Gross to the Van (just got my W2’s) = $54,000 in 10 months as an owner operator from Feb06 – Dec 06. Also, please note this is my first year as an o/o so there are a lot of DH miles. I hope to eliminate this problem this year.

Gas $19,620
Van Payment $6,240
Tolls $1200
Food $5,475
Cell Phone Payment = $1,500
Vehicle Maint: $1,200
Grand Total: $35,235
Total Profit: $18,765 (not really as much as I hoped for)
I that this year will be better than last as far as the DH miles go…..
As far as everything else goes I will have a better accuracy at the end of this year since I am recording everything the van does on my laptop.
 
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