Get your own authority. They take out more than 25%. They take out of your income for many of those expenses. If you learn how to accrue for monthly expenses, breakeven analysis breakdowns etc you can run your business. Great information
Ma’am you are INCREDIBLE! The info you put out, and the way you explain it is PRICELESS!! Please continue to your thing, it helps so many people. THANK YOU!!!
I loved how you broke this down so well I have only be trucking for 4 months 😂I have a longggggg way to go before I can become a owner operator but it was always my dream and I didn’t know what the differences between lease owner operator, and being completely on your own owner operator Thankyou so much and your right honestly if you know the game you been trucking for a while it’s either stay company driver or go completely on your own there is no point in having 1 foot in the door 1 foot out with lease purchase owner operator just go and be on your own and get all your money
Very informative, thank you for your dedication. Just a small adjustment- IFTA can be issued without your own MC & DOT, as long as you have an IRP account. Thank you for your videos. Very helpful information.
If you have a mc number you're not longer an owner operator. An owner operator owns a truck but operates under others authorities. If you have a mc number you're a small carrier. Hence m.c. means motor carrier
I've been pondering this for two years. I went to CDL school two years ago. I will buy a truck (Cash) and couldn't figure out what was best for this newbie. This has helped so much.
I watched 3 videos… in order basically… was already set on shipping or trucking. But now I’m positive… with my own authority. Basically… you got have a good calendar. Good at keeping track of stuff. And constantly brushing up on your duties as a owner with authority
Hello and thank you for making such great video was very well explianed but I think it's a little more responsibility to get own authority but better chance of success because you make all the rules set your company up as you wish as long as everything is up to date and DOT compliance. They have lease on companies that knows you make money so they will keep you in a work stage to keep you making them money. Although you are a lease on O/O you are still an asset for the company. I mean you should be able to have flexibility but believe or not there are some companies that except you to run your own truck as a company driver basically. They will lie and say NO FORCE DISPATCH but, as soon as you don't run the load they want they will make you suffer and wait. It's can be BS to lease on when you really only losing about 30 percent so I think it's definitely worth getting your own authority. It will be a lil rough in the beginning but once you cross that 3 to 6 months of operation you gonna better. There are also some companies that let the owner operator book own loads and sets you as someone with ya own authority without having ya own authority. To me that's ok but still not worth it because you are still getting hit for that 65-85 percent fee... And really when you do the math you will see that u wind up paying more leasing on because some companies are smart they know these trucks make money so they going to take money from you so I think it's best for ya OWN AUTHORITY..... 👍🏾👍🏾✊🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
You are a GEM! You just answered so many of my questions. I recently retired out of 29 years of service. and made the decision to buy me truck. I have driven for companies for six years, and drove almost anything and everything Uncle Sam has. However; this new adventure was already driving me a little nuts, because every time I turned around, someone was reaching their hands in my pockets for this tax and that regulation and so on. I love the way you explain things, and I am looking forward to checking out all your videos. Thanks so much.
I'm leased on to a carrier. I book my own loads. They charge 17% but on top of that it's $250 service fee, $150 trailer use fee weekly plus maintenance fee etc..... I could be making $1000 more a week with my own authority.
Why would anyone lease on to a carrier for 70 to 75% if they dont cover insurance. Thats a rip off. Im not paying someone 30 to 35% just to do paperwork and pay for am ELD. It would strictly only be to offset the insurance cost of a new authority. If they dont insure your truck why would you lease on. Dumb. Id do 85 to 90% and pay my own insurance though the carrier not 70 lol thats ridiculous. Also fuel cards don't get you more savings than the mudflap app which is free. We got fuel for $1,19 off today. With current market rates trucks are averaging $9k gross weekly. That would be $2700 a week at 70% to lease on.
Exactly. I am leased on currently for 7% plus insurance 1200 a month plus 1200 a month trailer lease. I run solo hard-core OTR. Even in this tough economy, I am OK. Not great, because I have a hefty truck payment. One year to go for that. I totally love my Carrier. I love my dispatch and I don't feel alone out here. I have a team that has my back. They have a vested interest in my success. I feel like if I had to do everything I have to do plus what they do for me, my head would explode. I am so thankful for my team!
@Belle that's a low percentage but they are making money off your truck and trailer payment. 7% isn't common because that isn't profitable. Regardless as long as you're happy and making money that's all that matters
@@dcollins4096Exactly! That's the way I see it. I have two trucks, both under my own authority. I do not have a driver...I'm it. I want to put a driver in one of my trucks, but the risks associated with any mishaps just doesn't seem worth it...at least not as a small carrier. I've met so many owner ops that have trash safety scores, high insurance, etc. I'd rather let a company larger than my own take on the liability and I just focus on my equipment. With that said, I'm considering putting on of my trucks under another company's authority and then put a driver in it. The other truck will remain under my authority...but I will be the only driver running under those numbers. Just makes more sense that way starting off. Running multiple trucks under your own numbers starting off can be counter productive. Even with seasoned drivers...shit can and will happen. I trust no ones instinct, judgement better than my own.
WOW... You are awesome. Thank you so much for all your information and sharing your knowledge. I was kinda confused on how to go about this and you made it so clear.
Great video and I love the content. if you have not already done so, would you please do a video on recommended companies that drivers can lease on to? Also, detailing the pros and cons of doing so? Thanks in advance
YOU ARE THE BEST!!!!! From now on, I go to you first. So refreshing to have it explained in "business language" with accurate line-item responsibilities as a comparison. One thing, however, that you did not discuss, and I was wondering if you had a "next level" video with tax, equipment ownership depreciation amortization vs. lease write-off deductions as it relates to the income side, IRS, etc. Prior experience: leases were 100% deductible and equipment purchases went under a depreciation schedule. That will have an impact on the $26k vs $20k figure, or will it? When leasing, how long are the terms, interest rate, equipment pricing, etc. Is it a balloon payment at the end? I realize every program will be different and I am currently conducting all of the due diligence to make the appropriate decision for my situation. Also, will a Lease Program allow the individual to sign obo a LLC or does it have to be attached to an individual?
I learned something from this video..i never knew that the eld was supposed to be care of the company..the company that i am lease on to charge me like 500 dollars for the eld....
I'm currently leased on to a major O/O company (*️⃣) that i pay 35% per load. I have been thinking of getting my own numbers but wasn't sure if it would be worth the frustration.... this is the exact info I've been searching for to help in my decision. THANK YOU! new sub
Miranda, I just want Thank You for such an outstanding video! I really appreciated the financial breakdown. Since you didn't include it, can you also do another video on retirement plans, workers comp insurance and SSA as it relates to this business? I'm currently a company driver today (w/ 2yrs exp) and trying to educate myself on different aspects of the business and learning about the "Owner Op" side of things.
My opinion is most companies have dispatchers and I don’t like a minimum wage dispatcher running my company. I got my own numbers cause I don’t believe in force dispatch as a leased on driver
I like your approach for comparison purposes, but I'm not sure some of the expense data is fair. If I understood your explanation, you seem to have mixed one time expenses for accounting, taxes, and maintenance (essentially annual and coincidentally due in September for this example) with the other recurring monthly expenses. I think it paints an imbalanced picture.
Hi again Sam :) The video was based on our actual numbers from September. It happened that the LLC and Accounting (that are annual) fell on this month. The goal is to show the raw numbers (true numbers from September in this case). This means that as an owner operator running under their own authority, if these were your September numbers, you would be responsible for 100% of the expenses that fell on that month, and would get 100% of the income. If, however, you were a Lease On operator where you do not have your own authority and run under a carriers authority, for this month of September, you would not be responsible for certain expenses such as the Carrier's accounting fee, the DAT loadboard, the ELD, the Permit (in this case is the EPN program related to the carrier), and the carriers LLC tax. The expenses that I listed are the Carrier's expenses related to running the company, so a leased on owner operator cannot and should never be asked to cover any of these expenses. A Leased On operator is ONLY responsible for expenses directly related to his/her operations (fuel, maintenance, washes, tools, permits for their truck, taxes related to their truck and trailer, insurance, etc). I hope this makes sense!
I'm actually on that fence you were talking about on getting my authority. I currently have 3 trucks and have them leased on. I do not drive any longer due to a shoulder injury so I have drivers for them. What always holds me back is the cargo insurance and the unknowns. Insurance is expensive so my fear is something will happen to a truck(breakdown, loss driver, etc) and I'm still responsible for that premium. What are your thoughts on this? You may be the determining factor on what I do!! No pressure lol
And I actually have a pretty good deal where I'm leased on. They take 20% plus I get use of their trailers for nothing other than maintenance if needed.
I’ve learnt so much from this video. I’ve always wondered how the breakdown across the board works. I’ve learnt a lot. I’d love to do work with your business. Do you dispatch for and lease on sprinter vans? I’m thinking of getting one then upgrade to a box truck.
Thank you, so much! After several videos I’m definitely subscribing. I really wanna move away from being micromanaged so much by my carrier. I’ve owned two businesses and retired once by 31…ready for the challenge again. Thank you for all the wonderful content. Do you have an updated video concerning the exact same content for 2024? Let’s go!!!!
Fuel cost. I’ve heard of smaller drayage operations where they split the fuel cost with the O/O. What are your thoughts on doing this in an OTR operation? I imagine a lot of O/O don’t like the idea of bearing 100% of the fuel at a 75/25 split. Thanks for the awesome content.
I’m curious why you would want O/O that have their own authority? Does that conflict with your business? Wouldn’t they have access to the same load board you do or do you have your own loads that you dispatch out rather than relying on a job board? Trying to figure out the whole authority vs lease on thing.
Love this question! Yes absolutely, an owner operator with their own authority becomes a competitor on the loadboard BUT I strongly believe that people who are interested in owning their own business should eventually truly own their business. Leasing on means that the carrier still provides you with those loads for the most part. An owner operator with their own authority have complete control over their loads. Plus, under your own authority you make more money. Is it counterintuitive for me as a carrier? Maybe. But the goal of this channel is transparency and saying that “as a lease on you will make as much as an own authority” is simply a lie for the most part :)
Getting the loads starting out as new authority is getting more difficult, not bashing the vid at all. You mentioned, start up program at your company. at the end, what is that exactly?
First time watching you and it makes since I love your video. You should do a video on the different fuel card company, insurance, and a Freight factoring company that will be awesome❤ tag me so I can watch them
I'm thinking about getting a full maintenance lease. Do I find a company first or lease the truck first? Do I need to register a business first? What is order I need to go through to start?
As a lease on operator I know I would have to cover insurance on my truck as a bobtail or bobtail liability but who pays for the cargo insurance if I'm using their trailer and they are leasing it to me for $125 a week.
Any insurance is part of your responsibility. I believe the insurance package will include cargo. Update: I saw she answered this question elsewhere. It does not change the fact that you will pay for it! "If you are leased on to a carrier that pays you 75% and takes the other 25%, they will provide you with liability insurance and cargo insurance. That cost, however, will be deducted from your paycheck. So if insurance for your truck and trailer costs the carrier $1,079 per month, when you get paid, that $1,079 is deducted from your paycheck. In essence, you are paying for your own insurance. Hope this answers your question!"
I read that unless u have more than one truck there’s no need to have your own authority…is that true..in Michigan ins is 30000 for a year 5000 down 2300 a month
Love your channel and you! My question is referring to the accountant .. I realize as a self employed person taxes will have to be paid quarterly, but is that amount correct for monthly to the accountant just for doing your taxes? Assuming it was a a one or two truck owner operator?
Hi again Miranda question on this topic as a Freight dispatcher how much I can charge a future owner operator to setup his/her business. How much would you offer your service to them.
Ok so, what if I wanted to Get an MC Authority But won't be Purchasing an actual Truck? How would Getting Insurance and filings work? Since I don't have an actual Truck?
im new to this, im leasing a Truck from my uncle, who is responsible for registering the Truck and registration fee? Truck is in my uncles name and im going to be using someones authority
Hi Miranda. Can I own a company, purchase equipment, hire drivers, and then lease on unto someone else's authority? Or I need to personally driver the truck?
I'm looking for a good company to lease purchase through. I live in socal but drive all over the western US. Could you give me a recommendation of a company to go with.
I had a question for you I watched one of your videos about getting your MC your. And all that good stuff so for all this to process and be rolling down the road and working takes about 90 days for it to go through or can you work while in the process of receiving some of the stickers or how does it work
Im doing some research for a project. What are some of the biggest operational headaches you guys deal with daily? Ive heard BOL generation, and sending invoices is a headache.
You could be a professor at an IVY school. You’re absolutely intelligent.
Get your own authority. They take out more than 25%. They take out of your income for many of those expenses. If you learn how to accrue for monthly expenses, breakeven analysis breakdowns etc you can run your business. Great information
Ma’am you are INCREDIBLE! The info you put out, and the way you explain it is PRICELESS!! Please continue to your thing, it helps so many people. THANK YOU!!!
Your handwriting is PERFECT. Thank you for making all of this comprehensive. Nobody explained any of this to me when I leased.
This was definitely everything I needed to hear to guide me on my way to becoming an owner operator, THANK YOU 🙏🏾
I loved how you broke this down so well I have only be trucking for 4 months 😂I have a longggggg way to go before I can become a owner operator but it was always my dream and I didn’t know what the differences between lease owner operator, and being completely on your own owner operator Thankyou so much and your right honestly if you know the game you been trucking for a while it’s either stay company driver or go completely on your own there is no point in having 1 foot in the door 1 foot out with lease purchase owner operator just go and be on your own and get all your money
Thank you so much for your delivery. Straight forward and very informative. Not a second wasted
Very informative, thank you for your dedication. Just a small adjustment- IFTA can be issued without your own MC & DOT, as long as you have an IRP account.
Thank you for your videos. Very helpful information.
If you have a mc number you're not longer an owner operator. An owner operator owns a truck but operates under others authorities. If you have a mc number you're a small carrier. Hence m.c. means motor carrier
So if I get a mc number , but leased on to a company for 8months . Would my mc be considered 8months old still?
@@unscripted_journey my question too
wow you broke that down so beautifully for me it was almost like being in school or something thank you for that
I've been pondering this for two years. I went to CDL school two years ago. I will buy a truck (Cash) and couldn't figure out what was best for this newbie. This has helped so much.
Try to get a diesel mechanic to look at one if so and check truck engine idle hours
Great stuff! Getting my own authority this year!
I watched 3 videos… in order basically… was already set on shipping or trucking. But now I’m positive… with my own authority. Basically… you got have a good calendar. Good at keeping track of stuff. And constantly brushing up on your duties as a owner with authority
Hello and thank you for making such great video was very well explianed but I think it's a little more responsibility to get own authority but better chance of success because you make all the rules set your company up as you wish as long as everything is up to date and DOT compliance. They have lease on companies that knows you make money so they will keep you in a work stage to keep you making them money. Although you are a lease on O/O you are still an asset for the company. I mean you should be able to have flexibility but believe or not there are some companies that except you to run your own truck as a company driver basically. They will lie and say NO FORCE DISPATCH but, as soon as you don't run the load they want they will make you suffer and wait. It's can be BS to lease on when you really only losing about 30 percent so I think it's definitely worth getting your own authority. It will be a lil rough in the beginning but once you cross that 3 to 6 months of operation you gonna better. There are also some companies that let the owner operator book own loads and sets you as someone with ya own authority without having ya own authority. To me that's ok but still not worth it because you are still getting hit for that 65-85 percent fee... And really when you do the math you will see that u wind up paying more leasing on because some companies are smart they know these trucks make money so they going to take money from you so I think it's best for ya OWN AUTHORITY..... 👍🏾👍🏾✊🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
You are a GEM! You just answered so many of my questions. I recently retired out of 29 years of service. and made the decision to buy me truck. I have driven for companies for six years, and drove almost anything and everything Uncle Sam has.
However; this new adventure was already driving me a little nuts, because every time I turned around, someone was reaching their hands in my pockets for this tax and that regulation and so on.
I love the way you explain things, and I am looking forward to checking out all your videos. Thanks so much.
*sticks hands into gilbets pockets and snatches a $20*
I'm leased on to a carrier. I book my own loads. They charge 17% but on top of that it's $250 service fee, $150 trailer use fee weekly plus maintenance fee etc..... I could be making $1000 more a week with my own authority.
Why would anyone lease on to a carrier for 70 to 75% if they dont cover insurance. Thats a rip off. Im not paying someone 30 to 35% just to do paperwork and pay for am ELD. It would strictly only be to offset the insurance cost of a new authority. If they dont insure your truck why would you lease on. Dumb. Id do 85 to 90% and pay my own insurance though the carrier not 70 lol thats ridiculous. Also fuel cards don't get you more savings than the mudflap app which is free. We got fuel for $1,19 off today. With current market rates trucks are averaging $9k gross weekly. That would be $2700 a week at 70% to lease on.
Definitely correct. I just did numbers. You’re absolutely right.
Exactly. I am leased on currently for 7% plus insurance 1200 a month plus 1200 a month trailer lease. I run solo hard-core OTR. Even in this tough economy, I am OK. Not great, because I have a hefty truck payment. One year to go for that. I totally love my Carrier. I love my dispatch and I don't feel alone out here. I have a team that has my back. They have a vested interest in my success. I feel like if I had to do everything I have to do plus what they do for me, my head would explode. I am so thankful for my team!
@Belle that's a low percentage but they are making money off your truck and trailer payment. 7% isn't common because that isn't profitable. Regardless as long as you're happy and making money that's all that matters
Actually it comes down to liability, that's the most important factor to consider which also effects your insurance premiums, etc.
@@dcollins4096Exactly! That's the way I see it. I have two trucks, both under my own authority. I do not have a driver...I'm it. I want to put a driver in one of my trucks, but the risks associated with any mishaps just doesn't seem worth it...at least not as a small carrier. I've met so many owner ops that have trash safety scores, high insurance, etc. I'd rather let a company larger than my own take on the liability and I just focus on my equipment. With that said, I'm considering putting on of my trucks under another company's authority and then put a driver in it. The other truck will remain under my authority...but I will be the only driver running under those numbers. Just makes more sense that way starting off. Running multiple trucks under your own numbers starting off can be counter productive. Even with seasoned drivers...shit can and will happen. I trust no ones instinct, judgement better than my own.
WOW... You are awesome. Thank you so much for all your information and sharing your knowledge. I was kinda confused on how to go about this and you made it so clear.
Great video and I love the content. if you have not already done so, would you please do a video on recommended companies that drivers can lease on to? Also, detailing the pros and cons of doing so? Thanks in advance
I would also love to see this kinda video
?? Please video
This stuff is way easier these days, with all the technology. Back in the day, it was a lot more challenging for sure.
YOU ARE THE BEST!!!!! From now on, I go to you first. So refreshing to have it explained in "business language" with accurate line-item responsibilities as a comparison. One thing, however, that you did not discuss, and I was wondering if you had a "next level" video with tax, equipment ownership depreciation amortization vs. lease write-off deductions as it relates to the income side, IRS, etc. Prior experience: leases were 100% deductible and equipment purchases went under a depreciation schedule. That will have an impact on the $26k vs $20k figure, or will it? When leasing, how long are the terms, interest rate, equipment pricing, etc. Is it a balloon payment at the end? I realize every program will be different and I am currently conducting all of the due diligence to make the appropriate decision for my situation. Also, will a Lease Program allow the individual to sign obo a LLC or does it have to be attached to an individual?
I learned something from this video..i never knew that the eld was supposed to be care of the company..the company that i am lease on to charge me like 500 dollars for the eld....
After this video, I want to work for you😂 this is a great find for me. Thanks for taking the time.
That was awesome, clear and concise exactly what I needed. Thank you so much for the encouragement!
You r' great ...
One of the best channel ..whatever info need related trucking we get here...
I'm currently leased on to a major O/O company (*️⃣) that i pay 35% per load. I have been thinking of getting my own numbers but wasn't sure if it would be worth the frustration.... this is the exact info I've been searching for to help in my decision. THANK YOU! new sub
Ls
Can you give us some guidance on how to choose a carrier to lease on to?
O/O will always be the better route to go
Miranda, I just want Thank You for such an outstanding video! I really appreciated the financial breakdown. Since you didn't include it, can you also do another video on retirement plans, workers comp insurance and SSA as it relates to this business? I'm currently a company driver today (w/ 2yrs exp) and trying to educate myself on different aspects of the business and learning about the "Owner Op" side of things.
Wow - great, detailed and clear explanation. Thanks!
Incredible info and easy on the eye. 👍👍
My opinion is most companies have dispatchers and I don’t like a minimum wage dispatcher running my company. I got my own numbers cause I don’t believe in force dispatch as a leased on driver
I like the way you explain everything, I’m learning a lot from your videos.
Thank you
I like your approach for comparison purposes, but I'm not sure some of the expense data is fair. If I understood your explanation, you seem to have mixed one time expenses for accounting, taxes, and maintenance (essentially annual and coincidentally due in September for this example) with the other recurring monthly expenses. I think it paints an imbalanced picture.
Hi again Sam :) The video was based on our actual numbers from September. It happened that the LLC and Accounting (that are annual) fell on this month. The goal is to show the raw numbers (true numbers from September in this case). This means that as an owner operator running under their own authority, if these were your September numbers, you would be responsible for 100% of the expenses that fell on that month, and would get 100% of the income. If, however, you were a Lease On operator where you do not have your own authority and run under a carriers authority, for this month of September, you would not be responsible for certain expenses such as the Carrier's accounting fee, the DAT loadboard, the ELD, the Permit (in this case is the EPN program related to the carrier), and the carriers LLC tax. The expenses that I listed are the Carrier's expenses related to running the company, so a leased on owner operator cannot and should never be asked to cover any of these expenses. A Leased On operator is ONLY responsible for expenses directly related to his/her operations (fuel, maintenance, washes, tools, permits for their truck, taxes related to their truck and trailer, insurance, etc). I hope this makes sense!
Greta video , glad I found your channel , at least you talk about numbers so people can understand the business , thank you .
Excellent Video, thank you so much !!!!!!!!!!!!!
Very interesting and encouraging
Finally a video that explains everything clearly
Again, awesome content. Thanks!
Thanks.. the información in this video is very useful for me.. keep the good job
I'm actually on that fence you were talking about on getting my authority. I currently have 3 trucks and have them leased on. I do not drive any longer due to a shoulder injury so I have drivers for them. What always holds me back is the cargo insurance and the unknowns. Insurance is expensive so my fear is something will happen to a truck(breakdown, loss driver, etc) and I'm still responsible for that premium. What are your thoughts on this? You may be the determining factor on what I do!! No pressure lol
And I actually have a pretty good deal where I'm leased on. They take 20% plus I get use of their trailers for nothing other than maintenance if needed.
So how did it work out ? How is the money per week for your and your drivers ?
@@johndismang care to share
I’ve learnt so much from this video. I’ve always wondered how the breakdown across the board works. I’ve learnt a lot. I’d love to do work with your business. Do you dispatch for and lease on sprinter vans? I’m thinking of getting one then upgrade to a box truck.
Thanks for the information, that's exactly what I was looking for 😊
Career that actually covers the ELD cost and mini carriers. Have you cover your load board because you dispatch yourself
Thank you, so much! After several videos I’m definitely subscribing. I really wanna move away from being micromanaged so much by my carrier. I’ve owned two businesses and retired once by 31…ready for the challenge again. Thank you for all the wonderful content. Do you have an updated video concerning the exact same content for 2024? Let’s go!!!!
I dont, but I have lots of fun market videos :)
Thank u a lot Godbless u useful information ❤
Fuel cost. I’ve heard of smaller drayage operations where they split the fuel cost with the O/O. What are your thoughts on doing this in an OTR operation? I imagine a lot of O/O don’t like the idea of bearing 100% of the fuel at a 75/25 split. Thanks for the awesome content.
I pay for my fuel and am only at 67%. It's difficult at times but I have my own fuel card. Mudflap is a joke in my operation.
I’m curious why you would want O/O that have their own authority? Does that conflict with your business? Wouldn’t they have access to the same load board you do or do you have your own loads that you dispatch out rather than relying on a job board? Trying to figure out the whole authority vs lease on thing.
Love this question! Yes absolutely, an owner operator with their own authority becomes a competitor on the loadboard BUT I strongly believe that people who are interested in owning their own business should eventually truly own their business. Leasing on means that the carrier still provides you with those loads for the most part. An owner operator with their own authority have complete control over their loads. Plus, under your own authority you make more money. Is it counterintuitive for me as a carrier? Maybe. But the goal of this channel is transparency and saying that “as a lease on you will make as much as an own authority” is simply a lie for the most part :)
This here useful and I sent to many clients thanks again for sharing this
Getting the loads starting out as new authority is getting more difficult, not bashing the vid at all. You mentioned, start up program at your company. at the end, what is that exactly?
very helpful video thank you very much
First time watching you and it makes since I love your video. You should do a video on the different fuel card company, insurance, and a Freight factoring company that will be awesome❤ tag me so I can watch them
What do you think about Sub-haul agreements? Where the O/O keeps his MC/DOT on his truck but runs loads for a carrier under that carrier's MC#?
Thank you for this video!!!! 👍🏾
I'm thinking about getting a full maintenance lease. Do I find a company first or lease the truck first? Do I need to register a business first? What is order I need to go through to start?
I'm lease purchase with own LLC however it's more company dispatch not self dispatch
MuthaTrucka! Look at those numbers! I think I'll stay company & let the "company" pay for everything for now. 🤑💸🚚🚛
Awesome thank you for posting 🙂
thank you for educating me
As a lease on operator I know I would have to cover insurance on my truck as a bobtail or bobtail liability but who pays for the cargo insurance if I'm using their trailer and they are leasing it to me for $125 a week.
There was a question in there could you answer it please?
Any insurance is part of your responsibility. I believe the insurance package will include cargo.
Update: I saw she answered this question elsewhere. It does not change the fact that you will pay for it!
"If you are leased on to a carrier that pays you 75% and takes the other 25%, they will provide you with liability insurance and cargo insurance. That cost, however, will be deducted from your paycheck. So if insurance for your truck and trailer costs the carrier $1,079 per month, when you get paid, that $1,079 is deducted from your paycheck. In essence, you are paying for your own insurance. Hope this answers your question!"
hi Miranda do you think its still better to open a company in these hard times we are going thru right now ? thanks
Why are more owner operators in the market better in your opinion?
I read that unless u have more than one truck there’s no need to have your own authority…is that true..in Michigan ins is 30000 for a year 5000 down 2300 a month
If you have a commercial motor vehicle that you plan to operate interstate, you will need your own authority :)
Who do you use for fuel?
Very honest reviews
Love your channel and you! My question is referring to the accountant .. I realize as a self employed person taxes will have to be paid quarterly, but is that amount correct for monthly to the accountant just for doing your taxes? Assuming it was a a one or two truck owner operator?
The other advantage of being leased to a carrier is that u get discount on maintainence & fuel , right ???
Correct if they have a good fleet card
I have a question what's your thoughts on becoming a lease rent operater??? Or a lease purchase operater?
Can you lease on to multiple carriers with different trucks for each carrier?!?!
Has ‘see-nineteen’ caused long delays (12mmnt wait) to obtain authority ??
Do penske subs require fica tax( blue decals ) on Tractor or simply in the written body of the contract in the tractors paperwork
Hi again Miranda question on this topic as a Freight dispatcher how much I can charge a future owner operator to setup his/her business. How much would you offer your service to them.
Keep On Truckin
Looking for someone where I could lease under your MC and split profits. my MC is new.
Thank you.
Can you lease on to a company or haul their freight if you have your own authority?
Do you provide service, like setting up carrier packets.
Do you do box truck tutorials too
My old company made drivers get their own plates and insurance and a 80/20 split
The company I'm going moving onto has it this way but it's at an 85/15 split
@mattaltendahl3837 what company are you going with?
Ok so, what if I wanted to Get an MC Authority But won't be Purchasing an actual Truck? How would Getting Insurance and filings work? Since I don't have an actual Truck?
_Thank you so much you are the best_
2450 dollars a month for accounting? is that right?
So basically you pay 6500 for convenience or learning the ropes
Brilliantly done!!! Thnx u
I own my own truck in 25 months do u do dry van are ref u can help me learn to be 100% just like u say
im new to this, im leasing a Truck from my uncle, who is responsible for registering the Truck and registration fee? Truck is in my uncles name and im going to be using someones authority
Hi Miranda. Can I own a company, purchase equipment, hire drivers, and then lease on unto someone else's authority? Or I need to personally driver the truck?
I'm looking for a good company to lease purchase through. I live in socal but drive all over the western US. Could you give me a recommendation of a company to go with.
I had a question for you I watched one of your videos about getting your MC your. And all that good stuff so for all this to process and be rolling down the road and working takes about 90 days for it to go through or can you work while in the process of receiving some of the stickers or how does it work
Actually I lease my truck and trailer to a company. Both of them have my plates
What's the name of your company and where are you located? You seem pretty trust worthy!
What differences, if any, would an owner operator who only operates a sprinter van have?
Unfortunately I couldn't tell you as I am completely unfamiliar with that equipment.
Hello. Thank you so so much for all of the information. Where would leasing FROM fit in? As a new CDL holder.
Leasing from- do you mean like from a dealership?
From a mega carrier. 3 to 4 year walk away lease.
I highly recommend you watch this first :) ua-cam.com/video/gWBMPBm3yf4/v-deo.html
Thank you so much!! And thank you for all the time you invest in not only your business but others as well.
Are you paying taxes each month on this truck?
Run under a carrier...15-18%...is decent..more than that..I ll run from..Own Authority is best
So I'm leased to a company they charge 20 percent .. at the end of the year can I claim that's as losses there 20 percent they take out?
Im doing some research for a project. What are some of the biggest operational headaches you guys deal with daily? Ive heard BOL generation, and sending invoices is a headache.
This was perfect 💯
If you lease to a carrier, do you need to pay your own registration?
You are amazing 😮!