“Leasing onto a carrier trades a slice of revenue for their authority, insurance rates, freight network, and back office. Your own MC keeps the whole rate but hands you insurance sticker shock, compliance ownership, and the job of finding freight. The honest answer: authority wins when you have cash reserves, freight relationships, and appetite for admin — leasing wins when you want to drive, not run a company. Neither is "the real trucking.”
Key takeaways
- Leasing on buys cheaper insurance, provided freight, and a settlement department — priced as a revenue split and their rules.
- New-authority insurance is the line item that breaks most first-year MCs; budget for it before ego does.
- Broker terms of 30–45 days vs. fuel due today means factoring or reserves are part of the authority plan, not a surprise.
- The proven path: lease on first, bank cash and relationships, take authority when the numbers say go.
What leasing on actually buys you
Under a carrier's authority you typically get: their (cheaper, established) insurance, dispatched or board freight, fuel-card network, IFTA and permit handling, and a settlement department that does the paperwork. The price is the revenue split and their rules — including which ELD platform you run and whose name is on the door.
It's the right trade when your bottleneck is freight access and admin, not rate.
What your own authority actually costs
The startup steps — MC/DOT, BOC-3, UCR, IFTA — are the easy part. The real weight:
- Insurance. New-authority premiums are the brutal line item; with no safety history, you pay for the unknown. This alone breaks many first-year authorities.
- Freight. No dispatcher means brokers, load boards, and building direct relationships — a second job until it isn't.
- Compliance is all yours. Drug-and-alcohol program, driver file, New Entrant audit within the first year, every record.
- Cash flow. Brokers pay in 30–45 days; fuel is due today. Factoring or reserves bridge the gap — plan for it, not around it.
The side-by-side
Factor | Lease on | Own authority |
|---|---|---|
Revenue | Split with carrier | 100% of rate |
Insurance | Carrier's rates | New-authority premiums |
Freight | Provided | You find it |
Compliance burden | Mostly carrier's | Entirely yours |
Cash flow | Settlements | 30–45 day broker terms |
Freedom | Their rules | Your rules |
A sane 2026 playbook
The pattern that keeps working: lease on first, bank money and relationships, then take authority when the numbers — not the ego — say go. Run the decision on cash reserves (can you absorb a slow quarter plus an insurance down payment?), not on what trucking YouTube says freedom looks like. And whichever path you pick, your compliance stack should be yours to keep: a month-to-month ELD moves with you; a carrier-locked one doesn't.
FAQ
Is your own authority more profitable than leasing on? Gross, almost always; net, only after insurance, admin time, and slow-pay cash-flow costs — many first-year authorities net less than a good lease. Model your lanes before you file.
Can I switch from lease to authority later? Yes, and it's the most common path. Time it behind cash reserves and freight relationships, not a calendar date.
Do I need my own ELD if I lease on? The carrier usually dictates the platform while you're leased. Going independent means choosing your own — one argument for authority if your current mandated system is the thing you hate.
Published July 2026. Not financial advice — model your own numbers.