What this track is
This is the realistic path from somebody with a regular driver license today to a CDL-A reefer driver pulling 53-foot trailers loaded with fresh pack potatoes out of Idaho or frozen fries out of a Lamb Weston, McCain, or Simplot plant. The arc is 12 to 24 months from decision to a steady reefer seat. Anyone telling you it is faster is selling you a CDL mill seat and a debt note.
This is not a sales pitch for trucking. The job has a real cost — divorce rate, sleep debt, sitting in a truck stop for 10 hours of mandatory rest with a microwave dinner. Before you spend a dollar, ride along with a working driver for two days. If you cannot find one, that is a signal about your network you should think about.
Phase 1: Decide and qualify (Weeks 0-4)
Before you sign up for a school you confirm you can actually get the license.
- DOT physical. You need a current Medical Examiner Certificate from a registered medical examiner. Sleep apnea, uncontrolled diabetes, and certain heart conditions will disqualify or restrict you. Get this done before you pay tuition.
- Driving record. Pull your full Motor Vehicle Record from your state DMV. A pattern of speeding in the last three years, any DUI in the last five, or a license suspension in the last three is going to make you uninsurable for the first carriers that hire new CDL-A drivers. Some carriers will look at you with a DUI past five years; many will not.
- Drug screen. You will be screened for the school, for the carrier, and randomly throughout your career. Marijuana is federally illegal for CDL holders regardless of state law. There is no workaround.
- Background check. Felonies are not an automatic disqualifier, but recent ones make hiring harder. Hazmat endorsement requires a TSA background check. TWIC for port work requires another one.
If all four come back clean, you move to Phase 2. If one is borderline, talk to a local recruiter at a carrier like Schneider, CR England, or Prime before you spend money on school — they will tell you if they would hire you.
Phase 2: Get the CDL-A (Weeks 4-16)
Two real paths, and one you should avoid.
Community college CDL program. Twelve weeks, roughly $4,000 to $7,000 depending on the state. Examples: College of Southern Idaho in Twin Falls, Walla Walla CC in Washington, Lake Area Tech in Watertown SD, Northland CC in Minnesota. You pay tuition. You leave with a CDL-A, no contract, free to work anywhere. WIOA workforce funding will sometimes cover it — ask the program coordinator.
Carrier-sponsored school. Schneider, CR England, Prime, Roehl, and others run their own schools or pay for an affiliated one. Tuition is free or low up front but you sign a contract — usually 9 to 12 months of driving for them after you get your license. Break the contract early and you owe back the tuition. The training quality varies. Prime is generally well-regarded; some others are not.
Avoid: The privately operated CDL mill that promises a license in three weeks and uses a high-pressure financing partner. You will leave with a CDL you cannot pass a road test for in real traffic, a $9,000 loan, and a year of nobody hiring you.
Pass the written tests (general knowledge, air brakes, combination vehicles), get your CLP, do your behind-the-wheel hours, pass the road test. You now have a CDL-A.
Phase 3: First year — dry van, not reefer (Months 4-15)
Almost no carrier puts a new CDL-A driver in a reefer trailer. Insurance does not allow it. You will spend your first 12 months in dry van, OTR, almost certainly long-haul, almost certainly with a trainer for the first 4 to 8 weeks before you solo.
You are looking for:
- Clean driving record. No preventable accidents, no roadside violations, no late deliveries you caused.
- Real miles. 100,000 to 120,000 miles in the year is normal. Less than 80,000 looks weak on a resume.
- Learning the basics nobody teaches in school: how to scale a load, how to back into a tight dock at 11 p.m., how to read the weather across three states, how to manage your 14-hour clock against detention you cannot predict.
Carriers that hire new CDL-As and have reefer divisions you can transfer into later: Schneider, Werner, CR England, Prime, Roehl, USA Truck, Crete. Stay one year minimum. Two is better. Quit before a year and the next carrier looks at you twice.
Phase 4: Move to reefer (Months 12-18)
You bid into reefer either internally at your current carrier or by hiring on at a reefer-heavy operation. Carriers worth a look for potato-region reefer: KLLM, Stevens Transport, Marten, Prime's reefer division, C.R. England's reefer fleet. Regional operations matter too — Doug Andrus out of Idaho Falls, May Trucking out of Oregon, smaller fleets running out of Pasco and Hermiston.
The reefer trailer is a different animal. You are now managing:
- A Carrier Vector or Thermo King Precedent reefer unit with its own diesel fuel tank, setpoint, continuous vs. cycle-sentry mode, and pre-cool requirements before loading.
- Temperature downloads at the receiver that document the trailer held setpoint the entire trip. A spike means a rejected load, a claim, and a write-up.
- Pre-trip and post-trip on the reefer in addition to the tractor — belts, fuel, defrost cycle, evap coil clean.
- Detention math at receivers. Two hours free, then paid by the hour up to a cap that varies by contract. Detention pay is the most fought-over line item in the industry.
The first six months in reefer you will make mistakes. Pre-cool too short. Setpoint too cold for product spec. Forgetting to start the reefer after a long break. Get them out of the way early.
Phase 5: Potato lanes and going where the money is (Months 18+)
Once you have a year of reefer miles you can target potato-specific freight. Lanes that move volume:
- Fresh pack out of Idaho — Idaho Falls, Burley, Twin Falls, Rupert — to wholesale distribution in LA, Dallas, Chicago, Atlanta. Peak September through April.
- Frozen fries out of Columbia Basin plants — Lamb Weston Hermiston, Lamb Weston Connell, Simplot Othello — to QSR distribution centers nationally.
- Frozen fries from Eastern Idaho — Simplot Caldwell, Lamb Weston American Falls — same network.
- Red River Valley fresh pack — Grand Forks, East Grand Forks — to Midwest grocery DCs.
- Maine — Caribou and Presque Isle — short-haul into the Northeast.
You will work these lanes through your company's dispatch, through dedicated potato-shipper accounts, or as an owner-operator pulling a broker board (DAT, Truckstop). Do not lease-purchase a truck in your first two years. Walk away from any recruiter who pitches it. The math does not work for most drivers.
What this becomes
A clean reefer driver after three to five years has options: stay solo, move to a dedicated lane with home time, move into Fleet Dispatch, step into Cold Storage Management if you understand the receiving side, or go owner-operator with eyes open about the math. Some move into Export Logistics Coordination at a shipper.
What to read, watch, and do before you start
- Read the FMCSA hours-of-service rules in plain English. Not a YouTube summary — the actual rule. You will live inside this regulation for the rest of your career.
- Watch a real pre-trip inspection on a tractor-trailer end to end. Search "CDL pre-trip full" on YouTube and pick a video over 20 minutes. The 5-minute ones are useless.
- Call two recruiters at carriers you are considering. Ask them what their reefer division miles look like in their slowest month, what their detention pay policy is, and what their average tenure is. The questions tell them you are not new to research; the answers tell you who to avoid.
- Read one driver forum thread on TheTruckersReport or r/Truckers about the carrier you are considering. Take it with salt — angry drivers post, happy ones drive — but patterns are real.
- Spend a Saturday at a Pilot, Love's, or TA truck stop. Sit in the driver lounge. Listen. Do not pitch yourself as a future driver. Just listen.