JourneyCareersLorry Driver
Global Career Guide (EN)From Transport & Logistics β†’

Lorry Driver

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A lorry driver, or HGV driver, transports goods over short or long distances, keeping shops, factories and businesses stocked. It suits independent, reliable people who like being on the road, don't mind time alone and can handle long hours and the responsibility of a large vehicle.

The role

What a lorry driver actually does, day to day.

The work is planning and driving routes, loading and unloading or overseeing it, doing vehicle checks, keeping to delivery schedules and following strict rules on driving hours and breaks. Concentration, patience and good road sense matter, along with the discipline to keep paperwork and logs in order and to drive safely whatever the conditions.

Hours can be long, early or overnight, sometimes with nights away from home, and a lot of the day is spent alone behind the wheel. Pay is usually a steady wage that rises with experience and the type of licence, and there is strong demand for reliable drivers.

By law you need the right category of HGV (LGV) licence and a Driver CPC qualification, gained after passing medical, theory and practical tests, and you usually must be over a minimum age with a full car licence first. Many haulage firms help fund the training.

A typical week

Day to day

1Plan and follow delivery routes
2Carry out safety checks on the lorry
3Load, unload or oversee the cargo
4Drive safely and to schedule
5Keep to legal driving hours and breaks
6Complete delivery paperwork and logs
7Report faults, delays or incidents