Record year for owner-operator income: Here are the numbers

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Updated Oct 15, 2015
Owner-operators operating in flatbed earned more than $60,000 in average net income (total revenue minus expenses) last year.Owner-operators operating in flatbed earned more than $60,000 in average net income (total revenue minus expenses) last year.

Owner-operators, led by independents and flatbedders, had a record year for net income, according to averages from ATBS, the nation’s largest owner-operator financial services provider. Leased operators and independents together cleared an average $56,167 during 2014. That’s 7 percent above the 2013 average, $52,406. Strong freight demand, a driver shortage and plunging diesel prices contributed to the increase. The 2014 total “is $2,000 higher than we predicted and most of it comes from the fourth quarter fuel cost reduction,” says Todd Amen, ATBS president and CEO. “All segments had a really good year.” Net income for independents and flatbedders topped $60,000. Independents’ income showed the biggest gain over the year, 8.7 percent. Flatbed haulers, however, experienced virtually no change in income in 2014.

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That reflects flatbedders experiencing stronger demand and rates a few years before dry van and reefers haulers, says Gordon Klemp, head of the National Transportation Institute. NTI’s National Survey of Driver Wages tracks compensation of drivers at medium-size and large fleets. “Most of the independent contractors operating in the independent and flat markets are on percent of load type programs, so their pay adjusts quicker,” Amen says. “The independents are certainly more in the spot market as well.  So these two segments reflect a really good freight market last year. They have higher highs in good times and lower lows in bad times, more volatile than the other segments.”
For 2014, net income for the groups tracked by ATBS was:

  • Independents: $60,157
  • Dry van: $54,490
  • Flatbed: $60,510
  • Reefer: $52,064
How was your 2014? If you’re using a mobile device, tap the button to call and weigh in: what are your thoughts on the prospects for the coming year? If you’re on a desktop, call 530-408-6423.How was your 2014? If you’re using a mobile device, tap the button to call and weigh in: what are your thoughts on the prospects for the coming year? If you’re on a desktop, call 530-408-6423.

Klemp says falling fuel prices helped owner-operator earnings in two ways. One is owner-operators receiving less than a 100 percent fuel surcharge pass-through have seen their share of fuel costs dropping proportionately. The other is that because surcharges are adjusted weekly after the U.S. Department of Energy releases its average fuel prices, a surcharge will overcompensate an owner-operator as long as prices continue to fall during the week.

Sign-on bonuses have been stable in recent months, Klemp says. The mid-point is $3,000 to $6,000, with the top tier $6,500 or more. Team bonuses remain very strong, and he has seen them as high as $15,000. Many fleets use bonuses selectively by region, to meet demand, and often keep high bonuses in place only briefly.

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