
Freight keeps America moving, and the people who move it are in demand. With a CDL you can be earning a real living in weeks - not years of school and debt. Here's why trucking is one of the best returns on four weeks of training you can find.
Most careers ask you to spend years and a lot of money before you ever see a paycheck. Trucking flips that. In about four weeks you can go from no license to a CDL employers are actively hiring for - and start earning a real wage almost right away. That's the whole reason so many people make the switch: the math works in your favor fast.
How much you earn comes down to the license you hold, the kind of work you take, your experience, and how many miles or loads you run. As a general guide, new NC CDL drivers commonly start around $50k-$70k+ per year, with experienced drivers and owner-operators earning more. Below, we break down the demand, the return on your training, and the paths a CDL can open for you.
Almost everything you own moved on a truck at some point. As long as stores need stocking and factories need supplying, the country needs commercial drivers. That demand is exactly why a CDL holds its value: it's a skill employers actively compete to hire.
Carriers across North Carolina and beyond are hiring company drivers and owner-operators right now. Get licensed and you walk into a job market that wants you - not one you have to beg your way into.

A bachelor's degree takes years and often leaves you with debt before you earn a dime. A CDL takes about four weeks - and you can be drawing a paycheck almost immediately after you pass your test.
Our 160-hour course runs about four weeks - classroom, range and real highway miles - then you test on-site.
No four-year tuition bill. And with CREDEE financing you can start training now and pay over time as you earn.
A CDL is portable, in demand nationwide, and something no one can take away once you've earned it.
Pay varies by carrier, route, experience and how many miles or loads you run. As a general guide, new NC CDL drivers commonly start around $50k-$70k+ per year, with experienced drivers and owner-operators earning more.
| Path | Typical work | General pay direction |
|---|---|---|
| Class B | Dump trucks, box trucks, buses, straight trucks - often more local | A solid, steady starting income |
| Class A | Tractor-trailers, tankers, flatbeds - the widest range of jobs | Generally earns more than Class B |
| Owner-Operator | You run your own truck and business | Highest upside - and the most responsibility |
A Class A CDL opens the most doors, which is why it's our most popular program. Not sure which is right for you? Compare them side by side on our Class A vs Class B page.
Drive a carrier's truck on a steady schedule. Predictable pay, benefits and someone else handling the truck costs - a great way to start.
Own your truck, run your own business, and keep more of what you haul. More upside and more freedom for drivers ready to run their own show.
Home most nights. Local and regional work keeps you closer to family while still earning a strong CDL wage.
See the country and stack the miles. Long-haul routes often pay more for drivers who like life on the road.
Whichever lane fits your life, our job-placement partner helps match graduates to the right roles - company-driver and owner-operator alike. See how job placement works.

Four weeks of focused training. A skill that's in demand nationwide. A real wage you can start drawing almost right away, with room to grow into higher-paying lanes or your own truck.
Pay isn't guaranteed and depends on you, your carrier and your miles - but few four-week investments put you in a stronger position to earn. Let's get you licensed.
Apply today and our team will call you to schedule your start date and answer every question about pay and placement.