Sooner or later, a lot of ag workers run the numbers on going independent. A company-driver reefer hauler thinks about buying a truck. A wage-earning farmhand thinks about leasing ground and growing on his own. The pitch — to yourself or from someone else — is always the same: keep the margin instead of giving it to the company. The math is real. So are the hidden costs that don't show up in the pitch.
Why the gross looks so much better
A company driver pulling reefer for one of the big fleets might gross $0.55 to $0.75 per mile. An owner-operator pulling the same lane on his own authority might gross $2.00 to $2.50 per mile. On paper, that's a tripling of revenue. The pitch from leasing companies and truck dealers tends to stop right there.
The same shape shows up in farming. A farmhand earns an hourly wage. The same labor applied to leased ground that he controls puts the entire crop revenue on his side of the ledger. That number is also much bigger than the wage. The pitch from equipment dealers, ag lenders, and land brokers tends to stop right there too.
What the gross doesn't show
For an owner-operator trucker, the real math runs something like this:
- Gross revenue: $2.20/mile loaded, on 110,000 loaded miles per year, equals around $242,000 a year on paper.
- Fuel: at 6.5 MPG and $4/gallon, on 130,000 total miles (loaded plus deadhead), about $80,000.
- Truck payment: a used reefer truck on a 5-year note runs $1,500-$2,500 a month, or $18,000-$30,000 a year.
- Trailer rent or payment: $400-$1,000 a month for a reefer trailer.
- Insurance: $12,000-$20,000 a year for a single-truck operation with cargo, liability, and physical damage coverage.
- Reefer fuel: $5,000-$10,000 a year depending on the lane mix.
- Maintenance and repairs: budget $0.15-$0.25 a mile, so $20,000-$30,000 a year on average — more in the years a major component goes.
- IFTA, permits, plates, ELD subscription: a few thousand a year.
- Self-employment tax: 15.3% of net earnings, on top of income tax.
By the time those line items run, the take-home on a $242,000 gross often lands between $60,000 and $90,000 — sometimes meaningfully less, occasionally more. A company driver pulling the same lane mix might net $65,000-$80,000 with no truck risk, with health insurance, and with a 401k match. The owner-op is making a similar number while carrying every dollar of downside risk.
The numbers above are illustrative — actual results swing wide based on lane, fuel price, what year the truck is, and whether the alternator decides to fail in February.
The same shape on the farm side
For a wage worker considering leasing ground and growing potatoes or another row crop on his own:
- Land rent: varies wildly by region — $200/acre in some places, $400+/acre in irrigated Idaho or the Columbia Basin.
- Seed: potato seed alone can run $400-$600/acre.
- Fertilizer, chemical, fuel: another several hundred per acre, priced one year and sold the next.
- Equipment: a used center-pivot, a planter, a harvester, a few trucks — even buying used, the entry equipment cost is six figures, often seven.
- Crop insurance: a real expense, with payouts that don't always cover an actual loss.
- Operating line interest: the bank lends the input money in spring, takes it back in fall, charges interest the whole time.
The variance is wider than trucking. A good contract year on the right ground can produce a real margin. A drought year, a hailstorm in July, or a processor cutting the contract acres can wipe the whole operation out before the first load goes to storage. Operations that have survived multiple cycles usually started with family land or a landlord willing to carry paper, not by writing a clean balance-sheet check.
What being a W-2 quietly covers
Things that disappear the day a worker leaves a company seat:
- Health insurance. The employer-paid portion of a family plan can be $1,500-$2,500 a month. On the individual market, even with ACA subsidies, the same coverage often runs $800-$1,500 a month after subsidy, more without.
- The employer's half of Social Security and Medicare — 7.65% of wages. As a 1099 contractor or sole proprietor, the worker owes both halves (15.3% combined), reported on Schedule SE.
- 401k match. A 3-6% match on $60,000 a year is $1,800-$3,600 of free retirement money that vanishes.
- Workers' compensation coverage in case of injury.
- Paid time off when sick or hurt.
- The employer doing the tax accounting and filing W-2s. Now the worker is doing quarterly estimated taxes, tracking deductions, and filing a Schedule C.
The cash value of those benefits combined, for a family-coverage worker, is often $25,000-$40,000 a year. That's the real number an owner-op has to earn on top of the wage equivalent just to break even with the company seat.
When it works
Owner-op trucking and independent farming both work — for some operators, in some years. Patterns that have made the difference:
- Starting with the truck paid off, or starting with debt-free land. The operations that fail in year two are usually the ones that took on the maximum loan at the maximum payment with the minimum reserve.
- Direct shipper relationships, not broker-dependent freight (trucking). Direct landlord relationships, not auctioned land (farming).
- A spouse's W-2 job carrying the health insurance and benefits. This is genuinely common and is not a side note — it's load-bearing for many independent ag households.
- Years of running the company seat first to learn the work cold, so the independent operation isn't also a learning curve.
- A real cash reserve before the first independent mile — typically six to twelve months of operating expenses, on top of the personal emergency cushion.
When it doesn't
The leasing-company truck deal where the worker is "his own boss" but is locked into the company's loads at the company's rates, paying off a truck the company will repossess if a payment is missed, is a well-documented trap. The handshake farm lease with no written terms where the landlord changes the rent after the seed is in the ground is another. Some operations fail because the operator wasn't ready. Some fail because the deal itself was bad from the start. Neither outcome shows up in the pitch.
Where to learn more
- IRS Schedule C and Schedule SE instructions — how independent earnings are actually taxed.
- USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA) — beginning farmer and rancher loan programs, real numbers, real eligibility rules.
- Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association (OOIDA) — independent organization that publishes real cost-per-mile data and lease-purchase warnings.
- Healthcare.gov — for honest pricing of individual-market health insurance with and without subsidy.
- Cooperative Extension farm-management programs at land-grant universities — many offer free or low-cost financial benchmarking for beginning operators.