Choose from a wide range of NEWCV resume templates and customize your NEWCV design with a single click.


Use ATS-optimised Resume and resume templates that pass applicant tracking systems. Our Resume builder helps recruiters read, scan, and shortlist your Resume faster.


Use professional field-tested resume templates that follow the exact Resume rules employers look for.
Create Resume

Use professional field-tested resume templates that follow the exact Resume rules employers look for.
Create ResumeIf you’re an owner operator truck driver, your resume needs to do more than list driving experience. It must prove that you run a profitable, compliant, and reliable business on wheels. Hiring managers, brokers, and logistics companies want to see safety metrics, revenue performance, equipment ownership, and operational efficiency. This guide shows exactly how to build a resume that positions you as a high-value independent contractor—not just another driver.
An owner operator resume is evaluated differently than a standard CDL driver resume. You're not just an employee—you’re a business.
Proven safety record (accident-free miles, compliance)
Revenue generation or load volume handled
Equipment ownership and maintenance knowledge
Route optimization and fuel efficiency
Contract experience with brokers or shippers
Strong reliability and on-time delivery metrics
Recruiter insight: If your resume doesn’t show business impact (money saved, earned, or efficiency gained), you’ll blend in with company drivers.
An owner operator resume summary should highlight your years of experience, CDL qualifications, safety record, business ownership, and measurable performance such as miles driven, revenue, or delivery success rate in 3–4 concise sentences.
“Independent Owner Operator with 10+ years of experience managing long-haul freight operations across 48 states. Maintained 100% on-time delivery rate and zero DOT violations over 750,000 miles. Proven track record of maximizing profit through route optimization and fuel efficiency. Skilled in contract negotiation and fleet maintenance.”
“Truck driver with experience delivering goods. Hardworking and reliable.”
The difference? Specificity, metrics, and business ownership positioning.
To compete effectively, your resume must include the right structure.
Professional Summary
Work Experience (Owner Operator + prior roles)
Skills (operational + business-focused)
Licenses & Certifications
Equipment & Assets (optional but powerful)
Education (minimal unless relevant)
This is the most critical section. It must show you operate like a business.
Type of freight (reefer, flatbed, dry van, hazmat)
Routes (regional, OTR, dedicated lanes)
Revenue or load volume (if possible)
Safety metrics (accident-free miles, compliance)
Operational responsibilities (dispatching, maintenance, billing)
Operated independently owned Class A truck, hauling refrigerated freight across 48 states with 98% on-time delivery rate
Generated $250K+ annual gross revenue through contract freight and broker relationships
Maintained DOT compliance with zero violations over 5 years
Reduced fuel costs by 15% through optimized route planning and load consolidation
Managed all business operations including invoicing, scheduling, and maintenance
Delivered goods to locations
Drove truck long distances
Responsible for deliveries
Key difference: Strong bullets show business performance and measurable results.
Your skills section should reflect both driving expertise and business ownership.
CDL Class A
DOT regulations compliance
Defensive driving
ELD systems (electronic logging devices)
Vehicle inspection
Load planning and route optimization
Contract negotiation
Cost control and fuel management
Scheduling and dispatch coordination
Invoice processing and bookkeeping
GPS navigation systems
Maintenance diagnostics
Fleet management software
Refrigeration unit operation (if applicable)
Recruiter insight: Most drivers only list driving skills. Owner operators who include business skills stand out immediately.
To pass Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS), include relevant keywords naturally.
Owner Operator
CDL Class A
Freight hauling
Long-haul trucking
DOT compliance
Fleet maintenance
Load planning
Route optimization
Fuel efficiency
Independent contractor
Logistics coordination
Transportation management
Use these within your experience and skills sections—not just as a list.
Many candidates skip this—but it can be a differentiator.
Equipment Owned:
2020 Freightliner Cascadia (Sleeper Cab)
53’ Dry Van Trailer
GPS & ELD compliant systems
Refrigeration unit (Thermo King)
This shows you're fully operational and ready to work without onboarding delays.
This section builds immediate credibility.
CDL Class A (Required)
Hazmat Endorsement (if applicable)
Tanker Endorsement
TWIC Card
OSHA Certifications (if relevant)
Tip: List expiration dates if current—it reassures recruiters instantly.
[Your Name]
[Phone] | [Email] | [Location]
Professional Summary
3–4 lines highlighting experience, safety record, revenue, and independence
Work Experience
Owner Operator Truck Driver
[Years]
Previous Driving Role (if applicable)
Skills
Licenses & Certifications
Equipment (Optional but recommended)
If your resume reads like an employee instead of a business operator, you lose your edge.
Recruiters need proof of performance:
Miles driven
Revenue generated
Delivery success rate
You are responsible for:
Maintenance
Contracts
Costs
Scheduling
If it’s not on your resume, it doesn’t exist.
Avoid phrases like:
“Hardworking”
“Team player”
“Responsible for driving”
These don’t differentiate you.
A logistics company is choosing between two owner operators:
Candidate A:
Lists driving experience and CDL license.
Candidate B:
Shows:
$300K annual revenue
99% on-time delivery
5 years accident-free
Owns late-model equipment
Candidate B gets the contract instantly.
Lesson: You’re not competing on experience—you’re competing on performance.
Your resume should signal:
Reliability (on-time delivery)
Profitability (efficient operations)
Low risk (clean safety record)
Independence (no hand-holding required)
When done right, your resume attracts:
Higher-paying loads
Direct shipper contracts
Fleet partnerships
Before submitting, confirm:
Includes measurable results (miles, revenue, efficiency)
Highlights business ownership clearly
Uses industry keywords naturally
Shows safety and compliance record
Includes equipment and certifications
If any of these are missing, your resume is underperforming.