There's always a question about how much sitting/layover vs driving. Many people come into expediting from OTR where they maxed out their driving time most of the time. With loads being booked days or maybe even weeks in advance, it was pretty easy to keep an OTR truck rolling constantly.
Expediting is partially preplanned and primarily unplanned. A solo operator who maxes out his drive time would still have to sit 55% of the time. Part of that could be on duty not driving but most would just be sitting. Factoring in the uncertainty of loads, a solo operator operating under logs should figure on sitting about 3/4 of the time.
Sometimes you'll run more and sometimes you'll sit for way too long. That's the nature of the beast. On an annual basis, if you average 1500 paid weekly, you've done well. Sometimes you'll exceed that and once in a great while you might nearly double it and sometimes you'll wish you made half. The only thing certain in this business is uncertainty of jobs, miles, locations etc.. If you can't tolerate that you need to think long and hard about entering this career.
Expediting is partially preplanned and primarily unplanned. A solo operator who maxes out his drive time would still have to sit 55% of the time. Part of that could be on duty not driving but most would just be sitting. Factoring in the uncertainty of loads, a solo operator operating under logs should figure on sitting about 3/4 of the time.
Sometimes you'll run more and sometimes you'll sit for way too long. That's the nature of the beast. On an annual basis, if you average 1500 paid weekly, you've done well. Sometimes you'll exceed that and once in a great while you might nearly double it and sometimes you'll wish you made half. The only thing certain in this business is uncertainty of jobs, miles, locations etc.. If you can't tolerate that you need to think long and hard about entering this career.