Describe one representative trip or load. The greyed examples are placeholders to overwrite — all figures are yours.
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Mileage pay or a cut of the load — see the real difference
Canadian drivers and owner-operators are offered pay two main ways: a flat rate in cents per kilometre (or per mile) for every kilometre driven, or a percentage of the load's gross revenue. They are not the same bet. Cents-per-kilometre pay is steady and predictable — it pays the same whether the freight is cheap or premium, which protects you on low-rate lanes and long empty stretches. Percentage pay rises and falls with the load: it rewards well-paying freight and punishes cheap freight, and it ties your income to how the lane is priced rather than how far you drive.
This calculator puts both on the same trip so you can compare them honestly. Enter the distance, the load's gross, the per-kilometre rate, and the percentage, and it returns the gross pay each way, the difference, the effective rate each structure implies, and — most useful of all — the break-even point. The break-even revenue per kilometre is the line that decides it: above it, percentage pay wins; below it, the mileage rate wins. It is built the QuicklyFig way: pure user-input math, no pay rates assumed, change any input and the comparison updates instantly.
| Figure | Formula |
|---|---|
| Cents-per-distance pay | (rate in cents ÷ 100) × distance + extra/accessorial pay |
| Percentage pay | load gross revenue × (percentage ÷ 100) + extra/accessorial pay |
| Difference | cents-per-distance pay − percentage pay |
| Effective rate under % | percentage pay ÷ distance (shown in ¢ per unit) |
| Effective % under CPK | cents-per-distance pay ÷ load gross × 100 |
| Break-even gross | (cents-per-distance pay − % extra pay) ÷ (percentage ÷ 100) |
| Break-even % of gross | (cents-per-distance pay − % extra pay) ÷ load gross × 100 |
| Break-even CPK rate | (percentage pay − CPK extra pay) ÷ distance × 100 |
| Weekly / annual difference | difference × loads per week (× 52 for annual) |
Use the break-even figures as your decision line. If the loads you actually run usually gross more than the break-even gross — or pay more than the break-even rate per kilometre — percentage pay tends to come out ahead; if they often gross less, the steadier cents-per-kilometre rate protects you. Run a few of your typical loads through it before you accept an offer or switch carriers, and pair it with the Cost Per KM and Break-Even Rate calculators so the pay you pick actually clears your costs.
Frequently Asked Questions
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