Truck driving has the fastest entry of any well-paying trade — you can go from zero to licensed and earning in about a month. Demand is constant (the economy runs on freight), and specialized hauling or owner-operating can push you into six figures. Here's how to get started.
Pay: $45,000–$110,000+ | Training: 3–7 week CDL school | License: Class A CDL | Requirement: 21+ for interstate, clean record
Commercial drivers move freight — everything from retail goods to fuel to oversized industrial loads. The work ranges from local delivery (home every night) to over-the-road (OTR) long-haul (days or weeks out). A Class A CDL is the most versatile license, letting you drive tractor-trailers and most commercial vehicles.
Enroll in a CDL training program — private schools, community colleges, or paid carrier-sponsored training (where a company trains you in exchange for a work commitment). Programs run 3–7 weeks. You'll pass a written exam for your permit, then a skills/driving test for the license. Endorsements like HazMat, Tanker, and Doubles/Triples add earning potential.
You must be 21 to drive interstate (18 for some intrastate work), pass a DOT physical and drug screen, and have a clean enough driving record.
| Stage | Typical Pay |
|---|---|
| New driver | $45k–$55k |
| Experienced OTR | $60k–$75k |
| Specialized (oil, oversize, hazmat) | $80k–$110k+ |
| Owner-operator | $100k–$150k+ (gross higher) |
Real rates, major carriers, and CDL schools across all 50 states.
View Pay Map →Local/regional: Home daily or weekly, slightly lower pay. OTR long-haul: Weeks out, higher miles and pay. Specialized: Oil field, oversize/heavy haul, hazmat, tanker — premium pay for added skill and risk. Owner-operator: Own your truck, higher gross but you cover expenses. The best fit depends on how much you value home time vs income.
CDL training takes about 3–7 weeks. After passing the tests you can start driving immediately.
New drivers earn $45,000–$55,000, experienced drivers $60,000–$75,000, and specialized or owner-operators $90,000 to $150,000+.
It can be — fast entry, steady demand, and good pay especially in specialized hauling. The main tradeoff is time away from home in long-haul work.
About this guide: Written by a working journeyman lineman with a Class A CDL — IBEW. Corrections welcome.
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