Walmart says it is raising truckers’ pay and starting a training program as it grapples with a driver shortage

Walmart says it is raising truckers’ pay and starting a training program as it grapples with a driver shortage


A Walmart truck departs the company’s distribution center in Washington, Utah.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Walmart said Thursday it is raising pay for long-haul truck drivers and launching a new program to train the next generation, as it seeks the staffing it relies on to replenish store shelves and warehouses across the country.

The retailer said truck drivers will now make from $95,000 up to $110,000 in their first year with Walmart, which the company said will raise their average pay. The company did not provide the current salary range for a new truck driver at Walmart, but said they have made an average of $87,500 in their first year.

Walmart has also started a 12-week program in Sanger, Texas, and in Dover, Delaware, where people can earn a commercial driver’s license and join Walmart’s fleet. It will cover the cost of earning a license, which can run between $4,000 and $5,000, said company spokeswoman Anne Hatfield.

The program will initially be open to only supply chain associates who are near the two training locations, Hatfield said. In the future, she said all Walmart employees will be able to apply for the program. She said the company hopes to train between 400 and 800 new drivers this year.

Walmart, the country’s largest private employer with 1.6 million workers, is ramping up recruiting efforts for truck drivers as the growth of e-commerce changes its business and complicates its supply chain. It is also a tight market for trucking labor.

The shortage of truck drivers in the U.S. hit an all-time high of more than 80,000 workers last year, according to the American Trucking Associations trade group. The lack of workers has stemmed from several factors, according to the trade group, including the grueling hours of long-haul trips, the older average age of current drivers and the small number of women in the industry. The Covid pandemic exacerbated the shortage, it said, as some truck drivers left the industry and fewer people went through training programs.

Walmart posted about the pay bump and training program Thursday morning on its corporate website. It has about 12,000 truck drivers in its workforce. The company hired 4,500 truck drivers, a larger number than any time in its history, a spokeswoman said. 

During the pandemic, more of Walmart’s sales have shifted online as people got groceries delivered to the home or retrieved online orders by curbside pickup. U.S. e-commerce sales rose 11% in the last full fiscal year, ended Jan. 31. They jumped 90% on a two-year basis.

For Walmart and other retailers, soaring online sales have shaken up the cadence of business and prompted a race to deliver packages quickly and keep items in stock at stores.



Source

What’s ahead for media in 2026? Anonymous executives make bold predictions
Business

What’s ahead for media in 2026? Anonymous executives make bold predictions

CEO and President of Warner Bros. Discovery David Zaslav and CEO of Paramount Skydance, David Ellison. Mike Blake | Brendan McDermid | Reuters It’s time for everyone’s favorite holiday tradition — CNBC’s annual anonymous media executive predictions! CNBC spoke with 16 of the most powerful and influential executives in U.S. media, sports and entertainment, who […]

Read More
As WNBA labor deadline nears, players union is ‘frustrated’ by lack of progress
Business

As WNBA labor deadline nears, players union is ‘frustrated’ by lack of progress

The WNBA Players Association executive director told CNBC she remains “frustrated” by the lack of progress toward a new collective bargaining agreement as the league’s new deadline to reach a deal approaches. “We’re a little frustrated with where we are right now, but we are holding to our principles,” Terri Jackson, executive director of the […]

Read More
Delta president Glen Hauenstein, who helped turn airline into industry profit leader, to retire in February
Business

Delta president Glen Hauenstein, who helped turn airline into industry profit leader, to retire in February

Glen Hauenstein, president of Delta Air Lines Inc., left, and Ed Bastian, chief executive officer of Delta Air Lines Inc., right, ring the opening bell on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2025. Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images Delta Air Lines President […]

Read More