HOW TO CALCULATE YOUR COST PER MILE AS AN OWNER-OPERATOR

📅 February 5, 2026⏱ 12 min read👤 American Truckers LLC

Your cost per mile (CPM) is the single most important number in your trucking business. It tells you exactly how much it costs to move your truck one mile down the road — and without knowing this number, you're essentially guessing whether each load is profitable or losing you money.

Most owner-operators who struggle financially don't have a revenue problem — they have an expense awareness problem. They accept loads that seem decent on the surface but actually cost more to haul than they pay. This guide fixes that.

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WHY COST PER MILE MATTERS

When a broker offers you $2.50 per mile for a load, you need to instantly know whether that's a good deal or a money-loser. If your cost per mile is $1.85, then $2.50/mile means $0.65 of profit per mile — solid. But if your cost per mile is $2.60, you'd actually be paying to haul that load.

Knowing your CPM lets you set a minimum rate — the lowest rate you'll accept — and make confident decisions on every load offer you receive.

THE TWO TYPES OF EXPENSES

Fixed Costs (You Pay These No Matter What)

Fixed costs hit you every month regardless of how many miles you drive or loads you haul:

Add these up for your operation. For a typical owner-operator with a financed truck, total fixed costs land between $3,180 and $7,450 per month. If you own your truck outright, your fixed costs drop dramatically — paid-off trucks are a huge advantage.

Variable Costs (These Change Based on Miles Driven)

Variable costs go up and down with how much you drive:

Total variable costs typically run $0.75 - $1.30 per mile. Fuel alone accounts for roughly half, which is why fuel cards and fuel optimization apps make such a difference.

THE COST PER MILE FORMULA

Here is the formula every owner-operator needs to know:

COST PER MILE FORMULA

CPM = (Total Fixed Costs + Total Variable Costs) ÷ Total Miles Driven

Here is a real example. Say you run 8,500 miles in a month:

REAL-WORLD EXAMPLE — FIXED COSTS

Truck payment$1,800
Trailer payment$700
Insurance$1,600
Permits & licensing$75
ELD & technology$50
Phone & internet$150
Accounting$150
Total Fixed Costs$4,525

VARIABLE COSTS AT 8,500 MILES

Fuel (6.5 MPG at $3.80/gal)$4,969
Maintenance & repairs$1,275
Tires$340
Tolls$350
Food & per diem$560
Factoring fees (3%)$510
Total Variable Costs$8,004

YOUR COST PER MILE

Total Monthly Costs$12,529
Total Miles8,500
COST PER MILE$1.47/mile

In this example, you need at least $1.47/mile just to break even. Any load paying less than $1.47/mile loses you money. Your goal is at least $0.50–$0.75 of margin above your CPM — putting your target rate in the $2.00–$2.25/mile range.

Pro Tip: Recalculate your CPM every month. Fuel prices change, insurance renewals hit, maintenance costs fluctuate. The owner-operators who stay profitable know their current number — not last quarter's number.
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WHAT ABOUT DEADHEAD MILES?

Here's where many owner-operators miscalculate: they forget about deadhead miles. If a load pays $3.00/mile for 500 miles but you have to drive 150 empty miles to reach the pickup, your effective rate drops significantly.

Effective Rate = Total Pay ÷ Total Miles (loaded + deadhead)

$1,500 ÷ 650 miles = $2.31 per mile effective

That $3.00/mile load is really a $2.31/mile load when you factor in the deadhead. Still profitable in our example, but a lot less impressive than it first appeared.

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⚡ YOUR CPM IS JUST THE STARTING POINT

Load IQ takes your cost per mile and goes further — evaluate any load for real profit, compare up to 3 loads side by side, see your $/day, and get a full audit of where your money is leaking.

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HOW TO LOWER YOUR COST PER MILE

Once you know your CPM, the next step is attacking it. Even small reductions compound into thousands per year.

1. Drive more miles. At 8,500 miles/month, $4,525 in fixed costs = $0.53/mile. At 10,000 miles, it drops to $0.45/mile. That $0.08 difference is $800/month in your pocket.

2. Buy fuel strategically. Fuel is your biggest variable cost. Use a fuel card with per-gallon discounts and apps like GasBuddy or Mudflap. A $0.15/gallon savings at 6.5 MPG over 8,500 miles saves $196/month.

3. Minimize deadhead miles. Every empty mile costs money without generating revenue. Plan round-trip lanes, book return loads before you deliver, and use a load board that helps minimize deadhead. Keep it under 10%.

4. Stay on top of maintenance. Preventive maintenance is 3–5x cheaper than roadside repairs. A $300 scheduled service beats a $2,000 breakdown every time.

5. Negotiate better rates. Even $0.10/mile more at 8,500 miles/month is $850 in extra gross revenue. Read our rate negotiation guide for scripts that work.

6. Track every expense. Owner-operators who track expenses monthly catch waste early — unused subscriptions, overpriced insurance, inefficient routes.

WHAT IS A GOOD COST PER MILE?

Lower is better — your cost per mile is what you spend to operate, not what you earn. For most owner-operators with a financed truck in 2026, CPM falls between $1.30 and $1.80:

Remember: Your CPM is your cost, not your revenue. A CPM of $1.50 means you spend $1.50 for every mile you drive. If a load pays $2.50/mile, your profit is $1.00/mile. The lower your CPM, the more profit you keep on every load.

The formula above gives you a snapshot. But your CPM changes every month — fuel prices shift, maintenance costs spike, insurance renews at a different rate. The carriers who stay profitable aren't the ones who calculated CPM once and forgot about it. They're the ones who track it monthly and catch problems before they become emergencies. A $0.15/mile increase in costs that goes unnoticed for 6 months costs you $7,650 at 8,500 miles/month.

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📈 KNOW YOUR CPM. NOW EVALUATE EVERY LOAD.

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RELATED GUIDES

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Monthly, at minimum. Fuel prices, insurance rates, and maintenance costs change constantly. If you use a spreadsheet, CPM calculation takes 5 minutes.

Most owner-operators calculate CPM as business costs only. Your profit is what is left after CPM. If you need to net $1,500/week at 2,100 miles/week, you need $0.71/mile above your CPM. So if CPM is $1.50, your minimum rate is $2.21/mile.

Fuel — typically 30–40% of total operating costs. That is why fuel optimization has the biggest impact on lowering CPM. The second biggest is usually truck payment and insurance combined.

Remove the truck payment from fixed costs. This drops CPM by $0.20–$0.35/mile. However, budget $0.05–$0.10/mile for a truck replacement fund.

No. CPM covers operating costs. Taxes are calculated on net profit. Set aside 25–30% of net profit for taxes. See our complete tax deduction guide to minimize what you owe.

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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Some links on this page are affiliate or referral links — American Truckers LLC may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Always consult a qualified professional for advice specific to your situation.

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