Skull wrote:
roythebus wrote:
I have to agree with omarek's post above! There's little money being a driver!
Running through my own figures, there isn't an easy answer. I can quote the figures for my own car, working for myself in a semi-rural area where there's often little business, no radio circuit etc. It depends also on the average speed you could hope to attain over a period, in my case a fairly high 23.5 mph. I'd suggest a town taxi average speed would be around 15mph if you're lucky. That way you can take your estimated or actual annual mileage, divide it by the mpg, that'll give you the hours you actually drive, loaded and empty.
In my case 35000 miles(take off say 2000 miles for private and non-productive trips), divided by 23.5 mph is drive time of 1361 hours a year, average weekly drive time of 27 hours. I know what our average mileage fare is, around £2 a mile loaded, so £1 a mile total. (We have a lot of dead mileage). So total income is say £30000, less overheads and fixed costs of about £8200, variable costs of about £4300 including fuel, leaves about £17500. Divide that by the drive hours (1361), gives an hourly take-home rate of £12.85 an hour, or £22 an hour all-in.
Work the figures backwards to double check, 1361 hours x £22 = 29920; compare that with the £30k, the figures are about right!
However, we don't have a radio to pay for; this could typically be £250 a week, so that adds another £13k a year to the fixed costs and overheads, so out of my £17500, minus £13000, I'd be left with £4500 a year, or £3.30 an hour! So to earn the magical £6 an hour, I'd have to drive 3 times as many hours to be worse off than driving 25 hours a week.
The fixed costs of my Skoda are about £6.5k, lease fee, insurance, taxi badge, ops licence, road tax, £125 a week!
If the op sends me some more detailed figures by pm, I'll happily run it through my spreadsheet.
So you work out your figures based on your average MPH to arrive at your hourly rate and not how long your ass is sat in the cab doing feck all.
You guys sure know how to paint a pretty picture.

I could always work out how much per hour it is sitting around. Luckily we work from home, 3 mins from the town centre so sit in the relative comfort of home during jobs.

Maybe the only way to compare hourly rate IS to work it out on "drive time", not sitting around time. If every cabby worked THAT out, there'd be none of us on the streets!
Assuming 14 hours "on call" a day, 350 days a year, (we don't have holidays), is 4,900 hours. Divide £30,000 by 4900 hours and you get £6.12 an hour, less expenses, so well below minimum wage. But then a lot of bus drivers and lorry drivers don't get paid through their break.