In this article
Welcome to the world of transport & delivery
Whether you like driving and independence, or you want an accessible job that's always in demand, this guide covers what a van driver actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A van driver drives a delivery or work van, transporting parcels and goods. In simple terms: they get parcels and goods where they need to be. Think of them as the deliverers of the doorstep.
- Drive delivery routes
- Deliver parcels and goods
- Plan and follow routes
- Keep deliveries on time
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Reliability โ deliveries depend on you
- Independence โ you work on your own
- Time management โ tight delivery windows
- Stamina โ long days, many drops
- Navigation โ finding addresses fast
- Customer service โ at the doorstep
Education & qualifications
No qualifications required beyond a driving licence โ van drivers are trained on the job, making it one of the most accessible jobs around.
Typical responsibilities
- Driving โ the delivery route
- Delivery โ parcels and goods
- Routing โ planning the drops
- Timing โ keeping on schedule
- Service โ at the doorstep
- Vehicle care โ looking after the van
Responsibilities by seniority
New Driver
0โ1 years
- Learns the routes
- Makes deliveries
- Builds speed
- Reliable work
- Toward experienced
Van Driver
1โ5 years
- Drives independently
- Hits delivery targets
- Trusted driver
- Often self-employed
- Toward more
Senior / Owner-Driver
5+ years
- Owns the round
- Or multiple vans
- Runs own delivery work
- Builds a business
- Toward logistics
Where van drivers work
๐ฆ Parcel delivery
Courier firms.
๐ Online retail
E-commerce delivery.
๐ฝ๏ธ Food / groceries
Food delivery.
๐ง Trade / supplies
Trade deliveries.
๐ข Multi-drop
Business deliveries.
๐ Self-employed
Own delivery work.
A day in the life
Loading the van and planning the route โ the day's deliveries mapped out.
On the road, making drops, keeping to the schedule and the delivery windows.
Navigating to addresses fast, the independent rhythm of multi-drop delivery.
Handling the doorstep โ deliveries, returns, and keeping customers happy.
Parcels delivered, route done, the doorstep economy moving. The deliverer. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Highly accessible
- Independent work
- Always in demand
- No qualifications needed
- Self-employment option
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Highly accessible
- Independent work
- Always in demand
- No qualifications needed
- Self-employment option
- Out on the road
- Route into logistics
โ Disadvantages
- Long hours and pressure
- Tight delivery targets
- Traffic and weather
- Physically demanding
- Modest pay
- Time-pressured drops
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Owner-Driver โ own your round
- Multi-van operator โ run several vans
- HGV / Truck Driver โ upgrade licence
- Transport Coordinator โ move into logistics
- Delivery Manager โ manage deliveries
- Own business โ delivery company
Van Driver vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Van Driver You are here | Delivers parcels and goods | Driving, delivery | Baseline | Accessible |
| Truck Driver | Moves freight by road | HGV licence | Higher | Accessible |
| Transport Coordinator | Coordinates vehicles and deliveries | Routing, scheduling | Higher | Accessible |
| Transport Dispatcher | Coordinates fleets in real time | Dispatching | Higher | Accessible |
| Warehouse Manager | Runs warehouse operations | Operations | Higher | Accessible |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
The e-commerce and delivery boom keeps van drivers in strong, constant demand, with self-employment and a route into logistics keeping the job attractive.
- E-commerce drives huge demand
- Deliveries keep growing
- It's a highly accessible job
- Self-employment is an option
- Strong, constant demand
Fun facts ๐ค
Van drivers are the reason your parcels arrive โ the doorstep economy runs on them.
The e-commerce boom created huge demand for delivery drivers.
It's one of the most accessible jobs โ just a licence needed.
Many van drivers go self-employed as owner-drivers.
It's a route into HGV driving and logistics.
Myths about this role
"Anyone can do it."
โ Hitting tight targets all day, every day, is harder than it looks.
"It's a dead-end job."
โ It leads to owner-driver, multi-van, and logistics.
"It's easy money."
โ Long hours, tight targets, and physical work make it demanding.
"Robots will replace it."
โ Doorstep delivery still needs human drivers.
"It's not skilled."
โ Route planning, time management, and service are real skills.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Like driving and independence
- Are reliable and self-motivated
- Can handle long days
- Want an accessible job
- Like being out on the road
- Want self-employment options
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You dislike driving
- You want a desk job
- You can't handle pressure
- You dislike long hours
- You want high pay immediately
- You dislike physical work
Accessible & independent
Van driver is an accessible, in-demand, independent driving job, where a licence and reliability turn into steady work, with self-employment options and a route into HGV driving and logistics.
โ Advantages
- Highly accessible
- Independent work
- Always in demand
- No qualifications needed
- Self-employment option
โ Challenges
- Long hours and pressure
- Tight delivery targets
- Traffic and weather
- Physically demanding
- Modest pay
How to get started
- Get a driving licence the main requirement.
- Start delivering trained on the job.
- Build speed and reliability hit your targets.
- Go self-employed or upgrade owner-driver or HGV.
- Advance multi-van, logistics, or your own business.
What to know before you start
- Hitting tight delivery targets all day is harder than it looks
- No qualifications needed โ just a licence
- E-commerce drives strong, constant demand
- Self-employment as an owner-driver is an option
- Route planning and service are real skills
- It leads to HGV driving and logistics
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People think anyone can do it, but hitting tight delivery targets all day, every day, in traffic and all weather, is harder than it looks. You're planning routes, managing time, and handling the doorstep โ it takes real reliability and stamina.
Van driver ยท 4 years in
The e-commerce boom means there's always work โ everything people order online has to be delivered by someone. It's accessible too: I just needed a licence. And I went self-employed as an owner-driver, which gives me independence and better pay.
Owner-driver ยท 7 years in
It's a route into logistics. I started delivering parcels, upgraded to an HGV licence, and now I'm moving into transport coordination. The driving experience and reliability you build open doors across the whole logistics industry.
Transport coordinator ยท 9 years in