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	<title>trucking companies hiring no experience Archives - Truck Drivers USA</title>
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		<title>Trucking Companies That Commonly Hire Recent CDL Graduates and What Drivers Should Know Before Applying</title>
		<link>https://truckdriversus.com/trucking-companies-that-commonly-hire-recent-cdl-graduates-and-what-drivers-should-know-before-applying/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Truck Drivers USA]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 May 2026 15:00:55 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Getting a CDL does not automatically guarantee a trucking job. A lot of drivers finish school expecting immediate opportunities, only to realize carriers often have different hiring standards tied to [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://truckdriversus.com/trucking-companies-that-commonly-hire-recent-cdl-graduates-and-what-drivers-should-know-before-applying/">Trucking Companies That Commonly Hire Recent CDL Graduates and What Drivers Should Know Before Applying</a> appeared first on <a href="https://truckdriversus.com">Truck Drivers USA</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Getting a CDL does not automatically guarantee a trucking job. A lot of drivers finish school expecting immediate opportunities, only to realize carriers often have different hiring standards tied to insurance requirements, freight demand, training background, and operating region. One company may actively hire recent graduates in one state while slowing entry-level hiring somewhere else.</p>
<p>That is why newer drivers usually benefit from focusing less on “guaranteed hire” recruiting language and more on how a company actually trains, dispatches, and develops inexperienced drivers during the first year on the road.</p>
<p>For most CDL graduates, the first job is mainly about building a safe driving history and learning how freight operations work in the real world.</p>
<h1>Several Large Carriers Continue Hiring Recent CDL Graduates</h1>
<p>Several national carriers remain known for hiring drivers with limited or no over-the-road experience, although openings can still vary by terminal location, freight division, and market conditions.</p>
<h2>Companies frequently associated with entry-level CDL hiring include:</h2>
<p>Swift Transportation<br />
Werner Enterprises<br />
Schneider National<br />
CR England<br />
Prime Inc.<br />
Roehl Transport<br />
Maverick Transportation</p>
<p>The structure behind those opportunities can look very different from carrier to carrier. Some fleets operate private CDL training programs. Others primarily recruit drivers who have already completed Entry Level Driver Training through outside schools. Some route inexperienced drivers into over-the-road dry van operations first, while others place a heavier focus on refrigerated freight, flatbed training, or team driving divisions during the early stages of employment.</p>
<p>Because hiring standards change with freight conditions and insurance requirements, many recent graduates compare several carriers before deciding where to apply.</p>
<h3>The First Year Usually Feels Different Than CDL School</h3>
<p>A CDL program teaches drivers how to pass the permit exam, complete backing maneuvers, perform inspections, and operate the truck safely enough to earn a license.</p>
<p>Daily freight operations introduce an entirely different environment.</p>
<p>Trip planning, fuel routing, customer appointments, weather decisions, traffic delays, backing under pressure, and hours of service management all become part of the routine once drivers begin hauling freight independently.</p>
<p>That adjustment period is one reason most large carriers pair inexperienced drivers with trainers before assigning solo trucks.</p>
<p>Some companies also limit dedicated routes, specialized freight access, passenger eligibility, or schedule flexibility until drivers establish more experience behind the wheel.</p>
<p>Those restrictions are common throughout the industry because insurance providers generally evaluate newer CDL holders differently than experienced commercial drivers.</p>
<h4>Starting Pay Often Depends More on Freight Than Recruiting Ads</h4>
<p>Pay expectations can also change quickly once drivers move beyond recruiting advertisements and begin working real freight schedules.</p>
<h5>First-year income often depends on:</h5>
<p>Freight consistency<br />
Dispatch operations<br />
Available miles<br />
Route structure<br />
Training pay<br />
Home time schedules</p>
<p>Over the road fleets continue serving as one of the most common starting points because those operations maintain larger freight networks and broader hiring pipelines for recent graduates.</p>
<p>Dedicated and local positions often attract experienced drivers looking for more predictable schedules, which can make those openings harder to secure immediately after CDL school.</p>
<p>As drivers gain experience, many eventually move into tanker operations, flatbed freight, regional routes, dedicated accounts, private fleets, or local driving jobs.</p>
<h5>Training Quality Often Matters More Than Fast Hiring</h5>
<p>A company willing to hire quickly is not automatically the best starting point. Equipment condition, trainer communication, freight stability, dispatch support, and breakdown response all affect how manageable the first year feels on the road.</p>
<p>Some drivers adapt quickly to over-the-road life while others struggle with long periods away from home, winter weather, mountain driving, irregular sleep schedules, or tight backing situations during the transition into trucking.</p>
<p>That is why experienced drivers often encourage recent graduates to pay close attention to training quality instead of focusing only on immediate hiring availability.</p>
<p>The first year behind the wheel is usually when drivers develop the routines, confidence, and operating habits that shape the rest of their trucking career.</p>
<h5>Flexibility Often Creates More Entry-Level Opportunities</h5>
<p>Location flexibility can make a major difference during the hiring process. Large carriers operating nationwide freight networks often hire more aggressively in stronger freight markets where volume remains steady throughout the year.</p>
<p>Drivers willing to stay out longer initially, relocate closer to major terminals, or run over-the-road freight often find more opportunities available early in their careers.</p>
<p>That flexibility can help drivers gain experience faster before eventually moving into jobs offering more schedule control or specialized freight options.</p>
<h5>The First Carrier Usually Opens the Door to Better Opportunities Later</h5>
<p>Many experienced drivers still describe the first year as the toughest part of entering trucking. Once drivers establish a safe driving history, complete inspections successfully, and gain real-world freight experience, more opportunities usually begin opening across the industry.</p>
<p>Regional fleets, tanker carriers, flatbed operations, dedicated accounts, private fleets, and local driving jobs often become easier to access once carriers can verify safe commercial driving experience over time.</p>
<p>For a lot of CDL graduates, the first company simply becomes the stepping stone that helps create broader career opportunities later.</p>
<h5>The Truck Drivers USA editorial team creates practical, driver-focused content covering industry topics, job trends, and real-world decisions that impact drivers at every stage of their careers. Each article is written to provide clear, accurate information that drivers can use.</h5>
<p>Last updated: May 21, 2026</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://truckdriversus.com/trucking-companies-that-commonly-hire-recent-cdl-graduates-and-what-drivers-should-know-before-applying/">Trucking Companies That Commonly Hire Recent CDL Graduates and What Drivers Should Know Before Applying</a> appeared first on <a href="https://truckdriversus.com">Truck Drivers USA</a>.</p>
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