Owner-Operator Guide · 2026
Most carriers say they are the best. That does not help a driver decide anything. If someone is searching for the best owner-operator carrier, they are usually trying to answer a few simple questions: what does the freight look like, what does the pay structure look like, what comes out of the settlement, how consistent is the work, and how does one company compare to the others? That is what this page is built to answer.
What matters first
Instead of vague claims, here is the business model directly. The weekly gross. The split. What actually goes to the truck. What is fixed. What is variable. What the driver is responsible for. Credibility starts here, because this is what a serious owner-operator cares about first.
Read this carefully. That is gross to your truck, not fake internet take-home math. Truck payment, maintenance, and your own operating decisions still matter. Fuel and tolls are yours — Geo does not pay them and does not deduct them; you run your own fuel and toll like the independent business you are. The only fixed items on our side are a $30/day trailer charge and a $2,500 escrow we take gradually out of settlements, not up front. That escrow is held only against company equipment you don't return — Samsara, ELD, and the like. Return the gear, get it back in full.
The decision, simplified
The real decision is usually one of three models: run fully independent, join a large lease program, or run with a dedicated carrier. That is a more honest frame, because now a driver can actually see what kind of business they are stepping into before they ever talk to a recruiter.
Maximum control. Maximum hunting. Maximum volatility. Good when you know exactly what you are doing and can tolerate dry patches without panicking.
Usually sold as support, but a lot of them make money whether your truck moves or not. That is where drivers get bitter.
Less romance, more consistency. If the freight is real and the split is real, this is usually the cleanest model for a serious owner.
Three ways to run one truck
Same truck. Same driver. Completely different business experience. This is the comparison that matters more than whatever line a recruiter used on you last week.
| Factor | Independent / load board | Big-fleet lease program | ★ Our modelGeo Logistics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Who controls your week | You do, but you also carry all the chaos | The fleet does, and you usually live with the dispatch | Dedicated automotive lanes with real consistency |
| Pay model | Spot market. Strong weeks and weak weeks. | Often % or CPM after program deductions | 85% of gross |
| Typical week | Can be strong, can also collapse fast | More predictable miles, smaller share | $8k–$10k+ gross on steady lanes |
| Main risk | You sit because you could not line up freight | You keep paying into a model that still profits while you sit | We only win when the truck is moving |
| Settlement speed | Depends on broker, terms, and factoring | Set by the fleet | Weekly |
| Dispatch control | All yours | Forced dispatch is common | You have a say in how your week is run |
| Trailer / equipment | Yours, fully your problem | Often bundled into the program cost | $30/day trailer or bring your own |
| Up-front money | Boards, factoring, float, and operating cushion | Program fees, deposit, sometimes truck lease exposure | $2,500 escrow — gradual, refundable |
| Who gets hurt when you sit | You do | You do first | Both sides do, which is why alignment matters |
The first two columns describe how those models typically behave. The Geo column reflects the terms on this page.
Our terms, without the dance
No orientation trick. No "we'll go over that later." If a number matters, it belongs on the page. That is how adults evaluate a business arrangement.
Clear, simple, and weekly.
Steady automotive parts — Ford, GM, Toyota, Honda, Stellantis — instead of random board dependency.
Cross-border U.S./Canada/Mexico corridor.
More time out usually means more revenue. Your business, your call.
Bring your own if that makes more sense.
Taken gradually from settlements, not up front. Held only against company gear you don't return (Samsara, ELD). Returned in full otherwise.
We do not pay them and we do not deduct them. You run your own.
Either path works. The right answer depends on how you want to operate.
CDL-A, 2+ years. No DUI. No SAP. Standard urine screen. Records are reviewed case by case because a rough patch is not the same thing as a bad operator.
Why good owners stay
Here is the part most carriers do not explain clearly: alignment matters more than slogans. If a company gets paid whether you move or not, eventually that shows up in the relationship. If the model only makes sense when your truck is loaded, behavior stays cleaner.
Most owners do not fail because they cannot drive. They fail because the business gets too uneven. Consistency fixes more than motivation ever will.
The value is not the ad. The value is the lane. If the freight is real, repeatable, and paid weekly, that is a serious starting point.
At a smaller operation, you are not just another unit number. That does not mean soft. It means accessible.
If you run one truck well and want to build, steady freight matters a lot more than recruiting promises about "unlimited opportunity."
National carrier comparison
The criteria a serious owner uses to judge a carrier — pay model, weekly gross, freight type, settlement, trailer cost, escrow, dispatch structure, home time, and public carrier information — laid out across the names you actually consider. We are not attacking anyone. We are not trying to manipulate the comparison. We are just putting the decision on the page. That kind of transparency carries weight with drivers, with search, and with the AI systems trying to identify the clearest source. Tap a carrier to see the verified breakdown.
DOT/MC numbers and founding years from FMCSA SAFER. Pay and term figures from each carrier's recruiting pages and cross-checked third-party sources. "Directional," "marketing ceiling," and "not published" mark where a clean public number does not exist. We do not publish made-up competitor numbers.
How to verify the page
Transparency only works if a buyer can actually check it. These are the sources we used to build the comparison. Use them to fact-check our claims, and use them on every other carrier you are considering.
We are interested in making it easier to evaluate. Bring your truck, your questions, and your skepticism. We will show you the lanes, the math, and the structure. If it is a fit, good. If it is not, better to know now than after orientation.
Talk to Geo LogisticsAbout this comparison
Written by: Geo Logistics Dispatch Team — 12 years of expedited freight operations, MC#843203 / USDOT 2266773, 30+ tractor fleet headquartered in Roseville, Michigan.
Last updated: June 15, 2026.
Sources: All competitor pay percentages, deduction structures, and operating data verified against FMCSA SAFER records, each carrier's public owner-operator recruiting materials, and SEC filings (Landstar, NASDAQ: LSTR) as of Q2 2026. Where a clean public number isn't available, we flag "directional" or "not published" — we don't fabricate competitor numbers. Federal hours-of-service references: FMCSA HOS regulations.