Overall
Home Time
Equipment and Maintenance
Dispatchers and Managers
Salary Surveys
Rate and review KLLM Transport
Share the salary you were paid at KLLM Transport
$Current Employee - Feb 19, 2025
Pros
Cons
Former Employee - Jan 20, 2025
Pros
Free automatic truck wash
Cons
Not many terminals. Limited upgrades on trucks. Trashy management.
Current Employee - Nov 28, 2024
Pros
New equipments Good dispatcher Good home time
Cons
Terminal mechanics take to long to fix something that it is simple, could be better
Current Employee - Nov 3, 2024
Pros
It’s a job PTO for OTR
Cons
Lots of down time Poor dispatch/communication Awful night/weekend support Poor maintenance They don’t value driver’s time
Current Employee - Feb 2, 2024
Pros
Ok trucks
Cons
70 cent mile don't matter if u only get 2k miles a week after taxes 1000 week I can make that local and be home everyday
Company Driver - 1 Year CDL Experience
Surveyed in on Feb 19, 2025
Current Employee
Yes
Company Driver - 6-11 Months CDL Experience
Surveyed in Jackson, MS on Jan 20, 2025
Current Employee
No
Company Driver - 5+ Years CDL Experience
Surveyed in Fort Worth, TX on Nov 28, 2024
Current Employee
Yes
Company Driver - 5+ Years CDL Experience
Surveyed in Burns Harbor, IN on Oct 9, 2024
Current Employee
No
Owner Operator - 3 Years CDL Experience
Surveyed in Atlanta, GA on Aug 20, 2024
Current Employee
No
Teion
Aug 10, 2016
If
I remember that old FFE Trailer Lot, the slope of it the way it lies behind the
shop and in front of the LTL building will ease your trailer out of being
straight, don't forget to add a touch of wheel to "Get under it" to
just hold it where you want against the slope of that hill. Ive seen new ones
forget that small detail.
Your learning is pretty intense right now. As it should be. The best thing you
can do in there is to be good to all the people you meet and talk to them. Get
to know them. It takes time. But it's well paid invested time and talk when it
comes time to have certain things that could be done but might give you the
work instead because billy and joe and david are too busy wrestling over the
local game score on the corner television.
Congratulations on your progess. Before anything...
To Walmart you go, get a large one inch thick book preferably hardback with a
legal sized paper in it ruled lines.
Write down your entire dispatched load into that book by trip number and so on.
Take a green marker and check off that load (It should fit one page maybe two
at most per load) after you are paid properly for it. Write down everything. Be
careful not to be putting down PRECISE times into that book, you want to be
paid for every load you touch, interchange, haul, load, drop hook, etc
When you settle down ask Mempis Dispatch if they have McKesson Loads for you.
These are picked up in Memphis already loaded and sealed. you go deliver it and
STAY in the dock while they reload with cardboard. Run it straight back to
memphis... drop hook another McKesson and go.
Pretty soon you will see it as a series of gravy train loads, very intense in
defending against robbers and killers and hardly stopping. However... you can
pretty much count on cardboard back to memphis and to a certain degree depend
on knowing what your future is a couple of days at a time.
Teion
Aug 10, 2016
Q: Do they put you with a roommate or do you have your own room?
A: When you at the hotel they will put you in a room with someone. Once they move you into a dorm you will be by yourself.
desperado75
Apr 26, 2016
I got contacted by airen who runs the BASF account a month later I called him and asked to be on his fleet he told me he didn't need anybody at the time and gave shane's contact info. who runs lms I know those 2 fleets you get a 5 cent raise and been doing ok on it...been on it since last September...
Kansasboy
Jun 2, 2016
KLLM
got the account for their lease drivers to pull. KLLM pockets $1.50/mile for
free off it since its their trailers, pays the lease driver $.85/mile so that
the driver can eat bread and bologna for the three years of the lease.
There's a reason why they never allowed company drivers to pull a Tyson
trailer.
Ronzken
Apr 2, 2016
Since
no one answered and I got my orientation date already, here is what happened.
My question was - “How long is the hiring process with KLLM?”.
Well, it could be done in a couple of days I think.
But for me, it took almost three weeks. Luckily, KLLM checked everything before
they sent me to the orientation.
Otherwise, without checking they would send me home I guess.
Because I moved to the US in 2008 and ever since my wife and I were self
employed, I had a hard time to proof my employment history.
And BOY is KLLM into employment history.
I applied to a couple of companies and was invited by every company without
further documentation of my employment history. So I guess it is a bit
different with KLLM.
Anyway, I drove semi trucks back in Germany 10 years ago and it is worth
nothing here in the US. I already knew that and have no problem with that and
liked the idea of training on the road as well.
Also, I already got my CDL by myself before applying with KLLM or any other
company.
But without any employment history it took me a couple more documents and phone
calls to get things rolling.
Why KLLM?
I really have not a lot of choices here in South Florida. Most of the companies
hiring just experienced driver. Other companies hiring just north of Orlando or
Lakeland. And some even flight you in every time you go on the road for a
couple of weeks.
Ok, thats my story and sorry for my English.
Still trying to improve my grammar
BoutMyMoney86
Oct 30, 2014
OMG,If I only knew what I know now..I would have never in a million years got involved with this company. They're truly trained to lie to the truck drivers and the truck drivers are the most important..They could care less if you wanted home time,more miles or better yet,to be treated with the up most respect as a person..I was lied to from the start,never go off what they say,make sure you get a name and everything in black and white...As for tuition reimbursement,you only get it if you attend their school,which they don't tell you..the 3000 sign on bonus,let's just say,forget about it...an by all means record your mileage,they cheated me out of 572 miles on my very first check,I was told 3 different lies by payroll...an to this day they haven't even tried to get my pay right..the dispatchers are for the company NOT YOU!!So if you're thinking about going here,You will be better off at McDonald's ..An yes I just recently walked away.like 4 days ago....
beezle
Jun 11, 2013
A lot of what you mentioned is the norm industry wide. Rarely does any company pay for you to deadhead home after unloading. Most truck company's pay Randal McNally miles which are zip code to zip code and none pay for 100% of miles driven, lease drivers should have the right to turn down loads since they are considered contractors, shippers/receivers won't pay you detention of you are late no matter the excuse, also by working by the mile the company keep most of the profit at $.90 a mile plus fuel surcharge yet the load of strawberries from Cali to the east coast will run around $9000 give or take per load. If you want to be a company driver then work for a company who has all company drivers so you don't have to compete with lease drivers. P.s. I've met many happy drivers at Kllm and some who paid off their truck. I consider their earnings per mile low compared to others but if you get your miles you should do okay.
TROOPER to TRUCKER
Apr 7, 2016
I was with kllm for about 4 yrs.You can make more than 700 on the company side.If your looking to get experience,run company for 6 months and lease for 6 months after that it becomes stale.
gruntlcpl
Oct 3, 2009
Q: I live in little rock and got a prehire from KLLM what is the closest drop yard to little rock, AR and do you get anyhome time while in training with your trainer and by chance can anyone give me how much the insurance is for driver and wife no kids
A:
Jackson and Dallas are probably the closest. Many customers will allow you to
drop your trailer for hometime. I have a friend who has a big gravel lot about
100 yards from my driveway. He lets' me drop my trailer there on hometime. Some
truck stops, businesses, even churches will let you drop your trailer for a few
days. As for hometime in training, you can probably forget that. My training
time, with orientation, 6 weeks on the road, then getting my upgrade, my truck
assignment and a load going home was a couple of days short of 2 months. I
never even got within 100 miles of my house. The training time is when they see
what you're made of. I have heard of some guys getting homesick and getting off
at a truck stop and not getting back on.
If you can't stay out for that time, you probably wont want to stay out for 3
or 4 weeks when you go solo. You are in training and learning to be a long
haul/ OTR driver. I find that after being out, for that 2 months, it's easier
for me to be out 4 to 5 weeks before hometime.
Now, that being said, I do occassionally get a chance to do a fly by while I'm
out on my 4 to 5 weeks. I have been close to the house and done my 10 hour
break at home or even a 34 hour restart. Sometimes, I just call to see if my
wife is at home, and stop for 30 minutes or an hour, grab a shower and a meal
(or whatever) and off I go. I promise that it does get easier as you go out.
Sure, you miss home and the wife and kids or in my case the dogs, but it does
take some adjustment. The key is having a good wife at home, whom you trust to
hold down the fort while you're gone. That is something I do have.