Transportation

Getting yourself and your gear to the job with whatever you've got.

You Don't Need a Truck

Let's get this out of the way immediately: you don't need a truck to start a service business.

Is a truck helpful? Sure. Is it required? Absolutely not.

People have started successful service businesses with:

  • Sedans
  • Hatchbacks
  • Minivans
  • SUVs
  • Borrowed vehicles
  • No vehicle at all (for some services)

Your transportation situation is not an excuse to delay starting. It's a constraint to work around.

Matching Service to Vehicle

Different services have different transportation needs. Pick a service that works with what you've got:

Sedan / Small Car Works For:

  • Window cleaning (minimal equipment)
  • House cleaning (supplies fit in trunk)
  • Basic lawn care (push mower fits in many trunks/back seats—remove handle)
  • Small painting jobs (supplies are compact)
  • Moving help (you're the labor, not the truck)
  • Gutter cleaning (ladder on roof rack or borrowing needed)

Hatchback / Small SUV Works For:

  • All of the above, plus:
  • Pressure washing (most residential units fit)
  • Larger cleaning jobs
  • Lawn care with more equipment
  • Light junk removal (small items)

Minivan / Large SUV Works For:

  • All of the above, plus:
  • Full lawn care setup
  • Serious pressure washing
  • Junk removal (moderate loads)
  • Moving help with more capacity

Pickup Truck / Van Works For:

  • Everything
  • Heavy junk removal
  • Large-scale lawn care
  • Moving services
  • Hauling materials

No Vehicle Options:

  • Partner with someone who has a truck
  • Rent when needed
  • Focus on walkable/bikeable services (cleaning in apartment complexes, urban window cleaning)
  • Use rideshare + small rolling cart for cleaning supplies

Making a Small Car Work

You'd be surprised what fits in a standard sedan:

Lawn Care in a Sedan

  • Push mower: Remove handle, lay flat in trunk or back seat
  • String trimmer: Trunk or back seat
  • Blower: Trunk
  • Hand tools: Trunk organizer
  • Gas: Secure container in trunk

Tips:

  • Lay down a tarp or old sheet to protect interior
  • Remove mower handle entirely or fold it
  • Secure the gas can so it won't tip
  • Keep a small tarp to cover equipment if using back seat

Pressure Washing in a Sedan

  • Residential pressure washer: Trunk (measure first—most fit)
  • Hoses: Trunk or back seat floor
  • Surface cleaner: Back seat
  • Chemicals: Secure in trunk

Tips:

  • Drain hoses before loading
  • Use a plastic bin for chemicals (leak protection)
  • Bring your own water access (garden hose connection to customer's spigot)

Cleaning in a Sedan

  • Vacuum: Back seat or trunk
  • Caddy with supplies: Trunk
  • Mop and bucket: Trunk
  • Extra supplies: Trunk organizer

Cleaning supplies are the easiest to transport. If you have any car at all, you can do cleaning.

Roof Racks and Carriers

Adding a roof rack opens up possibilities for small vehicles:

Ladder Transportation

  • Roof rack + ladder tie-downs: $100-200 total
  • Can safely carry extension ladders on most cars
  • Essential for gutter cleaning and some window work

Equipment Carriers

  • Roof cargo boxes: $200-500
  • Add significant storage without interior mess
  • Great for supplies and smaller equipment

Hitch Carriers

  • Hitch cargo carriers: $100-200
  • Works if your car has a hitch receiver
  • Good for equipment you don't want inside

Safety note: Know your vehicle's roof and hitch weight limits. Overloading is dangerous and can damage your car.

Renting When Needed

For occasional jobs that exceed your vehicle's capacity:

Truck Rental

  • Home Depot truck: ~$19/75 minutes
  • U-Haul pickup: ~$19.95/day + mileage
  • Lowe's truck: ~$19/90 minutes

Use cases:

  • Large junk removal jobs
  • Moving jobs
  • Hauling materials for bigger projects
  • When customer is paying enough to cover rental

Trailer Rental

  • U-Haul utility trailers: ~$15-30/day
  • Works with many SUVs and some cars with hitches

Math example:

  • Junk removal job pays $300
  • Truck rental costs $40
  • Still make $260 (minus dump fees)
  • Worth it for occasional larger jobs

Vehicle Upgrade Path

As your business grows, your vehicle needs may change. Here's a typical progression:

Stage 1: Whatever You Have

  • Make your current vehicle work
  • Prove the business concept
  • Save money from jobs

Stage 2: Practical Upgrade

  • Used pickup truck: $5,000-15,000
  • Used cargo van: $5,000-12,000
  • Larger SUV: $8,000-15,000

When to upgrade:

  • Turning down jobs due to vehicle limits
  • Spending too much on rentals
  • Current vehicle is unreliable
  • Business income can support payment

Stage 3: Purpose-Built Setup

  • Newer truck with proper setup
  • Commercial van with shelving
  • Truck + trailer combination

When to upgrade:

  • Business is established and growing
  • Need professional appearance
  • Adding crew members
  • Expanding services

The Vehicle Payment Trap

Don't buy more vehicle than you need or can afford.

Bad Decision:

"I need a $40,000 truck to start my lawn care business."

Result: $600+/month payment before you've made a dollar. Pressure to take bad jobs just to make the payment. Business fails under the weight of debt.

Good Decision:

"I'll start with my Camry, save money, and buy a used truck with cash when I can afford it."

Result: Low overhead, profitable from day one, upgrade when it makes sense.

The Math

A $600/month truck payment means you need to earn $600 just to break even on the vehicle—before gas, insurance, maintenance, and actually paying yourself.

A paid-off beater that runs? Your only costs are gas, insurance, and maintenance. Everything else is profit.

Commercial Vehicle Considerations

When you do upgrade, think about:

Insurance

  • Commercial vehicle insurance costs more
  • But provides better coverage for business use
  • Personal auto policy may not cover business use (check yours)

Maintenance

  • Budget for repairs and upkeep
  • Trucks with 150k+ miles need regular attention
  • Build a maintenance fund: $100-200/month

Fuel Costs

  • Trucks get worse mileage
  • Factor fuel into your job pricing
  • Track actual fuel costs to understand true job profitability

Signage and Branding

  • Vehicle wraps: $500-3,000
  • Magnetic signs: $50-150
  • Lettering: $100-300
  • Great advertising—your truck is a moving billboard

Making It Work: Real Examples

"I have a 2015 Honda Civic"

Services you can do:

  • House cleaning ✓
  • Window cleaning ✓
  • Basic lawn care (push mower, trimmer) ✓
  • Small painting jobs ✓

Setup cost: Roof rack ($150) for ladder when needed

"I have a 2010 Ford Escape"

Services you can do:

  • All of the above, plus:
  • Pressure washing ✓
  • Gutter cleaning ✓
  • Light junk removal ✓

Setup cost: Potentially none, maybe a roof rack

"I have a 2018 Toyota Sienna (Minivan)"

Services you can do:

  • Almost everything
  • Full lawn care setup
  • Serious cleaning operation
  • Moderate junk removal
  • Moving help

Setup cost: None—minivans are secretly perfect for service businesses

"I don't have a car"

Services you can do:

  • House cleaning (in walkable areas or using transit)
  • Window cleaning (minimal gear in rolling cart)
  • Partnered services (be the labor, partner has the truck)

Setup cost: Rolling cart ($30-50), transit pass, or bike

Action Steps

  1. Assess your current vehicle honestly—what can it actually carry?
  2. Match services to vehicle capabilities
  3. Identify any needed additions (roof rack, cargo carrier)
  4. Calculate rental costs for jobs that exceed your capacity
  5. Plan your upgrade path based on business growth, not wishful thinking

Next lesson: Smart strategies for getting equipment without draining your bank account.

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