Banks want a business plan before they’ll approve a truck loan. Partners want to see projections. And you need a roadmap that turns “I want to start a trucking company” into actual numbers. This template gives you the structure — you fill in the blanks.
✅ 13 chapters + 3 appendices — fill in the blanks
✅ Financial projections — revenue, costs, profit
✅ Lender-ready format — what banks want to see
✅ Completed sample financials — see a real example
💰 GET THIS + 5 MORE TOOLS FOR $89.99 (42% OFF) — See the Bundle → | Price increases to $109.99 April 15
A business plan isn’t a homework assignment. It’s the difference between knowing your numbers and guessing. The carriers who skip it are the ones who run out of cash in month 3.
Banks and equipment lenders require a business plan for truck financing. No plan = no loan = no truck, or worse — a predatory lease-purchase.
You assume $250K gross. Reality is $180K. You bought a truck based on the wrong number. Now the payment is eating you alive.
Freight drops in January. Your plan didn’t account for seasonality. You can’t make the truck payment. One slow month shouldn’t kill a business — but without a plan, it does.
What happens if trucking doesn’t work? What’s your break-even timeline? When should you walk away vs. push through? Without a plan, you don’t know.
Total cost of “I’ll figure it out as I go”: $15,000–$50,000+
The tool that prevents it: $29.99.
The financial projections section calculates your startup costs, monthly operating expenses, break-even timeline, and cash reserve requirements. No surprises.
Lenders take you seriously when you walk in with a professional business plan. It’s the difference between “How much do you want?” and “Let me show you the projections.”
When to add truck #2. When to cut a lane that isn’t working. When freight slows down and you need to know if the math still works. The plan answers these questions before they become emergencies.
Every section has fill-in-the-blank prompts, example numbers to reference, and trucking-specific categories already set up. No staring at a blank page.
One-page overview of your entire business. Fill-in prompts for mission, services, market, and financial highlights.
Business structure, MC/DOT details, equipment type, service area, and what makes your operation different.
Target lanes, freight demand, competition, rate trends. Pre-built framework with trucking-specific data points.
What you haul, how you operate, dispatch model, load sourcing strategy, and daily workflow.
18-line breakdown: truck, trailer, insurance, authority, deposits, reserves. Low and high estimates for each.
Monthly and annual revenue based on miles, RPM, and utilization. Multiple scenarios: conservative, moderate, optimistic.
Every monthly cost: fuel, insurance, maintenance, payments, permits, tolls, software, phone. Pre-categorized.
12-month profit and loss projection. Revenue minus expenses equals your take-home. Formulas pre-built.
When money comes in vs. when bills are due. Factoring analysis. Emergency fund calculation.
What happens if rates drop 15%? If fuel spikes? If you lose 2 weeks to a breakdown? Stress-test your plan.
When to add truck #2. Revenue triggers, cash reserve thresholds, and timeline benchmarks for scaling.
Insurance requirements, FMCSA filings, drug testing, ELD, IFTA, UCR. Everything that keeps your authority active.
When to pivot, when to sell, and when to walk away. Break-even timeline and decision framework.
Plus 3 appendices: completed sample executive summary, completed sample financial projections (so you see what a finished plan looks like), and a lender document checklist.
Research what sections a trucking business plan needs. Find financial projection templates. Adapt generic business plan formats to trucking. Figure out what lenders actually want to see. That’s 40+ hours of research and writing — or one weekend with this 34-page template.
$29.99 and an afternoon. That’s the difference between a carrier who walks into a bank with 13 chapters of projections and one who walks in with “I want to start a trucking company.” Which one gets the loan?
If this template doesn’t save you at least $300 in time, loan interest, or prevented mistakes — email us for a full refund. You keep the template. A better loan rate alone saves $2,000–$5,000 over the life of a truck loan.
What $29.99 prevents vs. what winging it costs:
The template costs $29.99. The carriers who fail are the ones who “meant to write a business plan eventually.”
34 pages. 13 chapters. 3 appendices. Financial projections. Lender-ready. Trucking-specific. One weekend.
$29.99 — Instant Download
Get Your Plan Done — $29.99 →🔒 Secure checkout • Instant download • 10X money-back guarantee
Or get this + 5 more tools for $89.99 (save 42%) — See the Bundle →
Excel file (.xlsx) that works in Google Sheets. The financial projection sections have pre-built formulas. Text sections have fill-in-the-blank prompts.
Yes. The template follows a professional business plan format that lenders expect. It includes all the sections banks and equipment lenders look for: executive summary, market analysis, financial projections, and operational plan.
Legally, no. Practically, yes. If you need a truck loan, lenders require it. Even if you’re self-funding, the financial projections will tell you if your plan is viable before you spend $15,000–$25,000 on startup costs.
Yes. The eBook teaches you how to get your authority and start operations. The Business Plan Template is a separate financial planning tool. The eBook tells you what to do. The plan tells you if you can afford to do it.
Yes. The Owner-Operator Profit System includes this template plus 5 more tools for $89.99 — a 42% savings.
Email us at . 10X Guarantee: worth $300+ or full refund.
Disclaimer: This product is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Some links may be 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.