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How Much Do Roadside Assistance Drivers Make?

Updated February 2026 • 8 min read

This is the question everyone asks before starting a roadside assistance business: how much can I actually make? The honest answer: it depends on your market, the number of motor clubs you work with, and how much you hustle. But the data shows a clear range, and we’ll break it all down.

$40K–$60K
Part-Time / New Operator
$65K–$100K
Full-Time Solo Operator
$120K–$200K+
Multi-Truck Operation

Pay Per Call: What Each Service Pays

Motor clubs and insurance dispatch networks pay a flat rate per service call. Here’s what you can expect in 2026:

Service TypeMotor Club PayDirect Consumer Pay
Jump Start$35–$55$75–$125
Tire Change$40–$60$75–$150
Lockout$35–$55$65–$125
Fuel Delivery$40–$60$75–$125 + fuel cost
Light-Duty Tow (0–10 mi)$55–$85$100–$200
Tow (per additional mile)$3–$5/mi$5–$8/mi
Winch-Out$60–$100$125–$250
GOA (Gone on Arrival)$15–$25N/A
💰 Key Insight: Direct Calls Pay 2–3x More The biggest jump in earnings comes from building your direct consumer business. A lockout that pays $45 from a motor club pays $100+ when a customer finds you on Google. That’s why optimizing your Google Business Profile is so important.

Realistic Earnings Scenarios

Scenario 1: Part-Time / Side Hustle

Hours: 20–30 hours per week, evenings and weekends

  • 2–3 motor club calls per day
  • Average $50 per call
  • Working 4–5 days per week
  • Monthly: $1,600–$3,000
  • Annual: $19,200–$36,000

This is realistic for someone still working a full-time job. Evening and weekend calls tend to pay a slight premium (some motor clubs add $5–$15 for after-hours).

Scenario 2: Full-Time Solo Operator

Hours: 40–60 hours per week

  • 4–6 motor club calls per day
  • 1–2 direct consumer calls per day
  • Average $60 per call (blended rate)
  • Working 22–25 days per month
  • Monthly: $5,500–$9,500
  • Annual: $66,000–$114,000

This is the sweet spot for most solo operators. At 5–7 calls per day with a mix of motor club and direct calls, you’re building a solid middle-class income with the freedom of being your own boss.

Scenario 3: Multi-Truck Operation

Hours: 50–70 hours per week (managing + running calls)

  • 2–3 trucks on the road
  • 12–20 total calls per day across all trucks
  • Average $55 per call (higher volume = more motor club calls)
  • After paying drivers ($15–$25/hr or per-call split)
  • Monthly: $10,000–$18,000 (owner take-home)
  • Annual: $120,000–$216,000

This is where the business starts to scale. You’re no longer trading time for money—your trucks are generating revenue even when you’re not driving. But it requires managing employees, more insurance, and higher overhead.

What Affects Your Earnings

Geographic Market

Urban areas generally produce more call volume, but rural areas can command higher per-call rates due to longer drive times. The best markets combine moderate population density with limited competition.

Market TypeCall VolumeAvg. Pay/CallCompetition
Major Metro (NYC, LA, Chicago)Very High$45–$65Very High
Mid-Size City (Charlotte, Nashville)High$50–$70Moderate
SuburbanModerate$50–$75Low–Moderate
RuralLow$60–$90Low

Number of Motor Club Contracts

This is the single biggest factor in your call volume. Operators with 1 motor club might get 1–2 calls per day. Operators stacked with 4–5 networks can get 6–10+ calls per day in the same area.

Learn how to stack motor club contracts →

Services Offered

The more services you can provide, the more calls you’re eligible for. Adding towing is the single biggest revenue booster—tow calls pay 50–100% more than roadside-only calls.

Time of Day

Night and weekend calls often carry a premium of $5–$15 per call. Operators who are willing to work 6 AM–12 AM shifts capture more total volume and higher average pay.

Acceptance Rate & Performance

Motor club dispatch algorithms route more calls to providers with high acceptance rates and strong performance scores. Consistently accepting 85%+ of calls and beating your ETAs can increase your daily volume by 30–50% over time.

Expenses to Factor In

These are your real costs as a roadside assistance operator. Subtract these from gross revenue to get your true take-home pay.

ExpenseMonthly CostAnnual Cost
Fuel$400–$1,000$4,800–$12,000
Commercial auto insurance$250–$700$3,000–$8,400
General liability insurance$40–$125$500–$1,500
Phone / data plan$50–$100$600–$1,200
Vehicle maintenance$100–$400$1,200–$4,800
Tool replacement$25–$100$300–$1,200
Accounting / bookkeeping$0–$150$0–$1,800
Total Estimated$865–$2,575$10,400–$30,900
📋 Tax Tip: Most Expenses Are Deductible As a self-employed business owner, nearly all of these expenses are tax-deductible. Plus, you can deduct the standard mileage rate ($0.67/mile in 2026) for all business-related driving. Track every mile with an app like Everlance or MileIQ—it can save you $5,000–$15,000+ in taxes annually.

How to Maximize Your Earnings

  1. Stack 3–5 motor club contracts — More networks = more calls = more money. This is step one. Get our contract guide →
  2. Build your Google Business Profile — Direct consumer calls are where the real margins are. Get reviews after every job.
  3. Add towing capability — Even a basic wheel-lift on a pickup opens up the highest-paying call types.
  4. Work peak hours strategically — Mornings (7–9 AM) and evenings (5–9 PM) have the highest call volume. Weekends are also busy.
  5. Track your per-call profitability — Some calls aren’t worth the drive. Know your break-even distance for each call type and be strategic about what you accept.
  6. Invest in fleet contracts — A single dealership or rental company contract can guarantee 5–10 calls per week at decent rates.
  7. Reduce dead miles — Position yourself in high-call areas instead of driving home between calls. Coffee shops near highway interchanges are your new office.

Real Talk: Is It Worth It?

Roadside assistance isn’t a get-rich-quick scheme. The first 3–6 months are lean as you build motor club relationships and learn your market. But for operators who stick with it:

  • You’re your own boss — No office politics, no commute, flexible schedule.
  • Low barrier to entry — Under $5,000 can get you started. No college degree required.
  • Scalable — One truck can become three trucks. Three trucks can become a fleet.
  • Always in demand — Cars break down in every economy. Recession-resistant industry.
  • Cash flow is fast — Most motor clubs pay weekly. Some platforms pay same-day.

The operators who earn $100K+ consistently are the ones who treat this as a real business, not a side gig. They stack contracts, invest in equipment, build their reputation, and constantly optimize.

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