When you pull into the largest truck stop in the world, the Iowa 80 near Walcott, a small city of diesel and fluorescent light planted in the flat middle of America, on a weekday morning, you’ll find drivers doing what they’ve always done in between hauls: checking phones, comparing routes, drinking coffee in paper cups, and complaining about dispatch. Autonomous trucking is the topic of discussion you won’t hear, at least not in public. Not because the drivers are unaware of its impending arrival. Because talking about it and knowing it’s coming are two different things, and many of these men and women find that talking about it makes it feel more real than they would like.
In the US, there are about three million truck drivers. Depending on how these factors are measured, it is among the most prevalent jobs in the nation. Seventy percent of the country’s goods are transported by truckers, including every piece of furniture, grocery pallet, medication, and part of every supply chain that keeps the nation running. A truck driver somewhere is thinking about it when you click the free shipping button on an online order without giving it much thought because their pay depends on that click turning into a dispatch. Some of the world’s most well-funded tech firms are increasingly viewing the massive, highly human infrastructure as a problem that can be solved by automation.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Industry | U.S. Trucking — estimated $800 billion sector; responsible for moving approximately 70% of the nation’s goods |
| Current Driver Workforce | Approximately 3 million truck drivers in the United States; an additional 600,000 in the United Kingdom |
| Annual Driver Turnover | 92% at large trucking fleets — meaning roughly 9 in 10 drivers leave their company within a year |
| Claimed Shortage | Industry groups cite 80,000 driver shortfall — disputed by labor researchers who point to 640,445 active commercial license holders in California alone versus only 140,000 trucking jobs in the state |
| Automation Milestone | Starsky Robotics — first company to run a fully driverless truck on a public highway (Florida Turnpike) with no human on board |
| Key Investors in Automation | Alphabet, Amazon, Tesla, Uber, Daimler, Ford, Toyota, Apple — collectively investing billions in autonomous vehicle and trucking technology |
| Projected Driver Shortage (Industry Claim) | Expected to double to 160,000 by 2030 — though critics argue this framing benefits fleet owners by suppressing wages |
| Core Workforce Problem | Not lack of drivers — but poor pay, long hours, unpaid waiting time, and conditions worsened by deregulation beginning in the 1980s |
| Road Fatalities Context | Approximately 40,000 people killed annually on U.S. roads; 1.25 million globally — cited by automation advocates as justification for removing human drivers |
| Broader AI Jobs Context | McKinsey and Microsoft research both identify transportation among sectors most exposed to near-term AI and automation displacement |
Sometime in 2019, Starsky Robotics, a startup that most people are unaware of, drove a completely autonomous truck down the Florida Turnpike. The truck was 35,000 pounds of steel traveling at highway speed without a driver. It was a technical achievement that went unnoticed. Several truckers in Florida were genuinely shocked when CBS News later spoke with them about it. It frightened Linda Allen, a driver who had actually come across an autonomous truck on that same highway. It had not been brought up by anyone at her company. At work, no one was discussing it. It’s worth taking a moment to consider that detail, which is the discrepancy between what the technology had already achieved and what employees were being told, because it reveals something genuine about how this disruption is developing.
The businesses making investments in autonomous trucking are neither small nor hesitant. Billions of dollars have been invested in the industry by Alphabet, Amazon, Tesla, Uber, Daimler, Ford, and Toyota, all of which are moving in the same direction but at different rates and using different technological strategies. Compared to autonomous cars, autonomous trucks are significantly easier to solve. Compared to city streets, highways are more predictable. The economics are more tidy. Navigating school zones and double-parked delivery vans in a crowded urban area is a more difficult automation task than an 18-wheeler traveling across the nation on interstates, adhering to designated lanes, and primarily interacting with other large vehicles. According to Finn Murphy, a truck driver with forty years of experience, the money was always going to go to trucks first. He was correct. Even he was surprised at how quickly the timeline has compressed.
The story of what happened to trucking before a single autonomous vehicle replaced a single human job is a parallel narrative that runs alongside the automation narrative but is rarely made clear. The industry’s economics were drastically altered by deregulation in the 1980s, which resulted in wage and working condition erosion that has persisted for decades. Large fleets have an annual driver turnover rate of about 92%, which means that nine out of ten drivers quit their jobs within a year. This is not because the work is unworthy, but rather because the compensation frequently falls short of the costs involved.

Sunny Grewal, a driver who hauls fruits and vegetables from Fresno, put it simply: any load that pays less than $3 per mile isn’t worth taking because it costs him between $1.75 and $2 per mile to run his truck empty. However, the rates decrease when brokers observe more drivers vying for the same loads. “If they know there are a lot of carriers,” he replied, “they treat you like crap.”
In response to this retention crisis, the industry has claimed that there is a driver shortage, a claim that frequently appears in headlines. According to the American Trucking Association, there is a shortage of 80,000 drivers, which tends to result in sympathetic coverage and, ironically, arguments for loosening rules pertaining to driver hours and training requirements. Labor researchers have noted that the reality is different. There are only about 140,000 truck transportation jobs in California, despite the fact that there are 640,445 active commercial driver’s licenses in the state. There are plenty of people who are willing to drive. Employers who are willing to pay enough to retain them are hard to come by.
Watching these two stories—the threat of automation and the ongoing labor crisis—be handled as distinct problems when they are obviously related makes it difficult to avoid getting a little frustrated. Businesses that have invested billions in autonomous trucking are also the ones whose lobbying influence shaped the low-wage, deregulated environment that initially made trucking a challenging career. Even before the robots arrived, the workers designated as “soon to be replaced” were being squeezed. In an industry that has spent years claiming they aren’t even being mistreated, the transition will fall on those who were never given the resources to prepare for it when the automation does come into effect, which it will do on a timeline that is still uncertain but obviously accelerating.
It is evident that the majority of Americans’ discussions regarding automation and employment are far behind what is actually taking place on the highways. The Florida Turnpike has already seen the autonomous truck. Commercial deployment is already getting closer. At truck stops, weigh stations, and rest areas along the interstates that still, for the time being, require a human being to navigate, three million people whose livelihoods depend on keeping a hand on a steering wheel are watching this happen, mostly in silence.
