“$10,000 to $200,000.” That’s not a startup cost estimate. That’s the distance between a shed and a mansion.
Here is what it actually costs, line by line, organized by how you plan to start. Every number is sourced from FMCSA data, industry reports, and real carriers.
Your total depends on one decision: the truck
The biggest variable in your startup budget is how you get a truck. Everything else — formation, registration, insurance, compliance — falls within a predictable range. The truck decision is what separates a $28K startup from a $135K startup.
| Scenario | Truck Strategy | Total Startup Cost | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lean | Leased truck, minimum viable setup | $28,000 - $50,000 | Testing the business, tight budget |
| Mid-Range | Used truck (financed), full coverage, 3-month reserve | $50,000 - $85,000 | Experienced drivers with savings |
| Full | New truck, comprehensive insurance, 6-month reserve | $90,000 - $135,000+ | Well-capitalized operators |
Most successful first-time owner-operators land in the mid-range.
Formation: the cheapest part ($50-$1,100)
Setting up your business entity and getting registered with the IRS and your state government is the cheapest part of the process. You need a business entity (most truckers form an LLC), an EIN from the IRS, and an operating agreement. The costs depend on your state’s filing fees and whether you do it yourself or hire someone.
| Item | Low | Mid | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LLC state filing fee | $50 | $127 | $500 | Average $127; California adds $800/year franchise tax |
| EIN from IRS | $0 | $0 | $0 | Always free at IRS.gov. If anyone charges you, walk away. |
| DBA / fictitious name | $0 | $50 | $100 | Only if operating name differs from LLC name |
| Operating agreement | $0 (DIY) | $250 | $500 | Recommended. Free templates available online. |
| Formation Total | $50 | $427 | $1,100 |
You can have your LLC, EIN, and business bank account in a week for under $200 in most states.
Federal registration: under $400 if you do it yourself
You need a USDOT number, an MC operating authority number, a BOC-3 process agent (which designates a legal agent in every state), and UCR registration. All of these are filed online through the FMCSA. The forms are straightforward and filing services that charge $1,000-$2,500 for them are unnecessary.
| Item | Cost | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| USDOT number | $0 | One-time | Free, issued immediately online |
| MC operating authority | $300 | One-time | Non-refundable; 21-day mandatory waiting period |
| BOC-3 process agent | $30 - $75 | One-time or annual | Covers all 50 states + DC |
| UCR registration (0-2 vehicles) | $76 | Annual | Required for interstate carriers |
| Federal Registration Total | $406 - $451 |
Insurance: the number that shocks everyone ($12,000-$25,000/year)
Insurance is the single largest startup expense and the number that changes the most plans. New authorities face a 20-40% surcharge over established carriers because only 3-5 insurance companies will write you a policy. Here is what each coverage type costs.
| Coverage Type | Annual (Low) | Annual (Mid) | Annual (High) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auto liability | $6,000 | $10,000 | $12,000+ | $750K min for general freight, $1M for hazmat |
| Physical damage | $1,700 | $3,000 | $4,000 | Required if truck is financed |
| Cargo insurance | $400 | $1,200 | $2,500 | Most brokers require $100K minimum |
| General liability | $450 | $600 | $1,500 | Non-trucking business claims |
| Bobtail insurance | $300 | $500 | $800 | Driving without a trailer |
| Non-trucking liability | $300 | $450 | $600 | If leased to a carrier |
| Occupational accident | $1,548 | $1,700 | $1,824 | $129-$152/month; covers you if injured |
| Total Annual Insurance | $12,000 | $18,000 | $25,000+ | |
| Down Payment (15-25%) | $1,800 | $3,000 | $5,000+ | Cash needed on day one |
New authorities pay 20-40% more than established carriers. Only 3-5 insurers write new authority policies. Premiums drop significantly after 1-2 clean years.
The down payment catches people off guard. On an $18,000 annual policy, that’s $2,700-$4,500 due before your authority activates. Day one, not day 30.
High-cost states (Florida, New Jersey, New York): expect $20,000-$35,000+ for a comprehensive package.
Compliance: $970-$5,250+
Compliance covers everything the federal government and your state require before you can legally operate: plates, permits, drug testing, an ELD, vehicle markings, and safety equipment. None of it is optional, and most of it is straightforward once you know the list.
| Item | Low | Mid | High | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IRP apportioned plates | $500 | $1,500 | $3,000+ | Annual | Varies by state, weight, and states you operate in |
| HVUT (Form 2290) | $100 | $350 | $550 | Annual | $550 for 55,000+ lbs |
| Drug & alcohol consortium | $99 | $199 | $299 | Annual | Required for solo operators (49 CFR 382) |
| Pre-employment drug test | $50 | $65 | $80 | One-time | Must complete before operating |
| FMCSA Clearinghouse queries | $1.25 | $2.50 | $5.00 | Annual per driver | |
| DOT physical exam | $75 | $125 | $200 | Every 2 years | |
| ELD device | $0 | $150 | $500 | One-time | Garmin eLog $250; some apps free |
| ELD subscription | $0/mo | $25/mo | $60/mo | Monthly | Garmin has no subscription |
| Vehicle lettering | $50 | $150 | $300 | One-time | USDOT on both sides, readable at 50 feet |
| Fire extinguisher | $25 | $40 | $75 | One-time | Required (49 CFR 393.95) |
| Reflective triangles | $20 | $30 | $40 | One-time | |
| Annual DOT inspection | $50 | $100 | $200 | Annual | Certified shop required |
| Compliance Total | $970 | $2,740 | $5,250+ | Plus ~$300/year in ELD subscriptions |
Yes, you need drug testing as a solo owner-operator. 49 CFR 382 has no solo-operator exemption. Budget $99-$299/year.
The truck: the elephant in the room
How you get your first truck is the single biggest financial decision in the startup. Leasing, buying used, and buying new each have different risk profiles. The industry advice is nearly unanimous: lease or buy used for your first truck.
| Strategy | Upfront Cost | Monthly Cost | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lease | $0-$2,500 | $1,600 - $2,500/mo | Lowest entry; test the business | No equity; higher long-term cost |
| Used (financed) | $10,000 - $25,000 down | $1,200 - $2,000/mo | Builds equity; lower payments | Maintenance risk |
| New | $25,000 - $50,000 down | $2,000 - $3,000/mo | Warranty; better fuel economy | Highest risk for new carrier |
“Don’t buy a truck you love. Buy a truck that makes money. A used Cascadia at $45,000 earns the same per-mile rate as a new Pete 389 at $200,000.” — TruckersReport forum
Industry advice is nearly unanimous: lease or buy used. The extra $1,000-$1,500/month in new truck payments has killed more carriers than any freight recession.
Other equipment and operating costs
| Item | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Trailer lease (if needed) | $500 - $1,200/month | Dry van, reefer, or flatbed |
| First month fuel | $5,000 - $10,000 | ~10,000 miles/month |
| Load board subscription | $42 - $299/month | Trucker Path free; DAT $49-$299/month |
| Fuel card | $0 - $129/month | Many free; discounts of 3-8 cents/gallon |
| Accounting software | $0 - $50/month | QuickBooks Self-Employed ~$15/month |
Operating reserves are where most failures happen
You need 3-6 months of operating expenses in cash, above and beyond everything listed above. This is the difference between surviving a bad month and closing the business.
Why: Brokers pay net-30 to net-45. You haul a load on March 1, you get paid April 1 at the earliest. Truck payment was due yesterday.
Why more: Breakdowns happen. Turbo replacement: $3,000-$5,000. Transmission rebuild: $5,000-$8,000. If your truck is down a week, you’ve lost $3,000-$5,000 in revenue AND paid $3,000-$8,000 in repairs. Without reserves, that single event ends your business.
| Monthly Operating Expenses | 3-Month Reserve | 6-Month Reserve |
|---|---|---|
| $8,000/month (lean, leased) | $24,000 | $48,000 |
| $11,000/month (mid-range) | $33,000 | $66,000 |
| $15,000/month (full, new truck) | $45,000 | $90,000 |
At minimum, keep $15,000-$30,000 in cash above your startup costs.
The three scenarios, totaled
Lean: $28,000 - $50,000
| Category | Cost |
|---|---|
| Formation (LLC, EIN) | $50 - $300 |
| Federal registration (MC, BOC-3, UCR) | $406 - $451 |
| Insurance (quarterly down payment) | $3,500 - $5,500 |
| Compliance (IRP, HVUT, drug test, ELD, etc.) | $970 - $2,500 |
| First/last month truck lease | $3,200 - $5,000 |
| First month fuel | $5,000 - $8,000 |
| Operating reserve (3 months) | $15,000 - $30,000 |
| Total | $28,000 - $50,000 |
Mid-Range: $50,000 - $85,000
| Category | Cost |
|---|---|
| Formation (LLC, EIN, registered agent) | $150 - $600 |
| Federal registration | $376 - $421 |
| Insurance (annual or semi-annual) | $5,000 - $8,000 |
| Compliance | $1,500 - $3,500 |
| Down payment on used truck | $10,000 - $25,000 |
| First month fuel | $5,000 - $8,000 |
| Operating reserve (3-4 months) | $25,000 - $40,000 |
| Total | $50,000 - $85,000 |
Full: $90,000 - $135,000+
| Category | Cost |
|---|---|
| Formation (LLC, registered agent, legal) | $300 - $1,400 |
| Federal registration | $376 - $421 |
| Insurance (comprehensive annual) | $5,000 - $6,250 |
| Compliance | $2,500 - $5,250 |
| Down payment on new truck | $25,000 - $50,000 |
| First month fuel | $6,500 - $10,000 |
| Operating reserve (6 months) | $45,000 - $60,000 |
| Total | $90,000 - $135,000+ |
How to fund it
Savings. Ideal. No debt, no interest, no monthly obligation.
Equipment financing. 10-20% down, 4-7 year terms, 5-12% interest. The truck is collateral. Reasonable debt for a proven model.
SBA microloans. Up to $50,000 for new businesses. 8-13% interest. Fair terms, slow process.
Factoring (for cash flow, not startup). Sell invoices to a factoring company at 2-5% discount to get paid immediately instead of waiting 30-45 days. Most new carriers use it for the first year.
Avoid: Credit cards (18-28% APR on a 50% failure-rate business). Predatory lease-purchase programs (read the fine print). 401(k) withdrawals (terrible odds against compound growth).
Monthly operating budget after launch
Once you are running, here is what it costs to keep the truck moving. These are annual figures for a single-truck operation. Your cost-per-mile is the number that determines whether you make money or lose it.
| Expense Category | Annual (Low) | Annual (Mid) | Annual (High) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fuel | $45,000 | $57,600 | $75,000 |
| Truck payment or lease | $18,000 | $24,000 | $30,000 |
| Insurance | $12,000 | $18,000 | $25,000 |
| Maintenance and repairs | $10,000 | $15,000 | $25,000 |
| Tires | $3,000 | $4,500 | $6,000 |
| Permits, licenses, tolls | $3,000 | $5,000 | $8,000 |
| Taxes (quarterly estimated) | 25-30% of net | 25-30% of net | 25-30% of net |
| Phone, tech, office | $1,200 | $2,400 | $3,600 |
| Total Annual Operating | $95,000 | $130,000 | $175,000+ |
Before you accept your first load, calculate your cost-per-mile. According to ATRI’s 2025 Operational Costs report, the industry average was $2.26/mile in 2024 (down 0.4% from 2023, but non-fuel costs hit a record high of $1.78/mile). Average contract rate in 2024: $2.09/mile — below cost. Know your number.
What this page does not include
- Your living expenses during ramp-up (rent, food, utilities, health insurance)
- Tax reserves beyond quarterly estimates
- Major repairs — a single breakdown can add $5,000-$10,000
- Trailer purchase if needed ($15,000-$45,000 used)
Plan for startup costs PLUS 3-6 months of personal living expenses. For most people, the total real capital needed is $40,000-$160,000.
It’s a lot. It’s also why the adequately-capitalized carriers are still operating five years later.
How Much Does It Cost to Start a Trucking Company? FAQ
How much money do I need to start a trucking company?
For a lean startup with a leased truck, plan on $28,000-$50,000. For a mid-range setup with a financed used truck, $50,000-$85,000. For a new truck with comprehensive insurance and full reserves, $90,000-$135,000+. These numbers include formation, registration, insurance, compliance, equipment, and 3-6 months of operating reserves.
Why is insurance so expensive for new trucking authorities?
New authorities face a 20-40% surcharge over established carriers because they have no safety record, no operating history, and statistically higher claim rates. Only 3-5 insurance companies will write new authority policies, which limits competition. The good news: premiums typically drop significantly after 1-2 years of clean operation.
Can I start a trucking company for under $10,000?
Not realistically. Even the most bare-bones setup -- leased truck, minimum insurance, absolute minimum compliance costs -- runs at least $15,000-$20,000 before operating reserves. And starting without operating reserves is the number one reason new carriers fail. Anyone advertising a '$5,000 startup' is either leaving out major costs or selling a lease-purchase program with hidden expenses.
What is the biggest startup cost most people miss?
Operating reserves. Most people budget for the truck, insurance, and registration but forget they need 3-6 months of operating cash to survive slow periods, breakdowns, and the 30-45 day gap between hauling a load and getting paid. That is $15,000-$30,000 that needs to be sitting in your bank account above and beyond everything else.
Should I lease or buy my first truck?
Leasing costs less upfront ($1,600-$2,500/month, minimal down payment) and lets you test the business with lower risk. Buying a used truck ($30,000-$80,000) costs more upfront but builds equity and is cheaper long-term. Buying new ($120,000-$180,000+) is the most expensive and riskiest for a new carrier. Most industry advice: lease or buy used for your first truck. Do not finance a new truck until you have proven the business works.
Planning your trucking company? Talk to an insurance expert first.
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