"Get paid mileage or percentage of the load??"
#1
A regional job that operates within 500 mile raduis, 5 days out 2 in.
Reefer units/ food carrier The company offers percentage or mileage pay. Why give an option? I don't think you can pick one option for each load, I think you pick one option and stick with it. I have only dealt with companys that pay mileage, never dealt with percentage. Quite simply I am skeptical of percentage pay. If you can shed a little more light on this(pros/cons) it would be greatly appreciated. Frankly with 1 yr of OTR under my belt, believe it or not i am still a little GREEN!!! :lol: :lol: Which option would you select and why?
#2
I'd take mileage. Why? You know what you're getting. % may/may not be the sweeter deal.
What's the mileage pay? have you talked to drivers under the % plan or asked what is avg revenue from the carrier? The current drivers will be wayyyyy better than asking any of us. If it were me, I'd do mileage for 1 month. Then, I'd switch to % for 2-3 weeks and test the waters. This is only if I couldn't talk to other drivers about the pay or if the carrier won't shoot you any #'s.
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Mud, sweat, and gears
#3
I'd take milage. Atleast you know what your getting. Whereas if your company if hauling cheap freight, your working for a cheap wage...
I'd ask if I could try each for 2 weeks though if they would do that for you...If not, milage is what I'd take
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Mama cooks the chicken fried in bacon grease, Down the road, Down the road, Down the road a'piece!! Adapt and overcome.
#4
I work on percentage but, we haul oversize stuff so we get a pretty good rate. If we don't have a load coming back we get paid milage. It isn't alot but when you factor in your rate going out it comes out to a pretty good average.
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Don't trust anybody. Especially that guy in the mirror.
#6
Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Longview, Washington
Posts: 146
We were paid %. BUT the amount "paid per mile" was there for you to see. The rates were great outbound but you really had to watch the brokers on the way home.
From just looking at my check I could tell what the broker had paid on the way home, had to bring it to the bosses attention more than once. Running milage always seemed to come up short, about 8%. Do some math {milage vs %} so you get an idea of what to expect. You should do this anyway. Mistakes happen and the driver comes up short all to often. Numbers don't lie, but they can be "fudged".
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Bad weather gets bad drivers off the road...one way or another! Fourcats
#7
Board Regular
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: sacramento
Posts: 236
percentage.
when i break it down, ive never made less than 30 cpm and average about 48 cpm. one load cross country i made 82 CPM. that was only once. i wish it would happen again ( military loads pay good) im a rookie too flatbed rules
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The Green Grass on the other side, still needs to be mowed
#8
Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: SE Arizona
Posts: 130
Without seeing the numbers it's impossible to say for sure. But I would take the percentage. I always made better money running percentage than mileage. A lot depends on where you run, but overall percentage has always paid better for me. You will find yourself running cheap once in awhile, especially if you see a lot of the East coast as rates tend to be lousy there. But, even at that, much like all18, I never made less than .30 a mile.
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"And the road becomes my bride I am stripped of all but pride. So in her I do confide. And she keeps me satisfied" "As if you ever knew what it was taking you down the line..." |

