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Running five drivers is a scheduling problem. Running fifty is an operations problem, a compliance problem, and an HR problem simultaneously. Most route business owners who have made that transition describe the same experience: the systems that worked fine at small scale become visible liabilities once the headcount climbs.
This post covers the specific payroll and HR challenges that route operators face as they scale, and the infrastructure decisions that determine whether growth is manageable or chaotic. The good news is that the hard parts are predictable. You can build for them before they become problems.
Last updated: May 2026
Why Payroll Gets Complicated as You Add Routes
At five drivers, you can probably manage payroll manually. You know each driver’s situation. You remember who asked for an advance, who changed their bank account, who has a different state withholding. It’s a lot of mental overhead, but it works.
At twenty drivers, that approach starts breaking down. At fifty, it doesn’t work at all. The math gets harder, the state filing requirements multiply, and the margin for error on any individual paycheck narrows because drivers are depending on accurate pay and have less tolerance for mistakes.
The specific payroll complications that hit growing route businesses hardest include overtime tracking across an expanding workforce, multi-state tax filing as routes spread geographically, varying pay structures across driver tiers, and benefits eligibility tracking as you cross headcount thresholds that trigger ACA requirements.
The ACA Threshold Problem
One of the less obvious scaling milestones for route businesses is the 50 full-time equivalent employee threshold under the Affordable Care Act. Once you reach it, you’re classified as an Applicable Large Employer (ALE) and are required to offer minimum essential coverage to full-time employees or face potential employer shared responsibility payments.
The calculation isn’t simply headcount. It includes full-time employees plus full-time equivalents calculated from part-time hours. For route businesses with variable-hour drivers, this math can be harder to track than it looks. According to IRS guidance on employer shared responsibility, penalties for failing to offer coverage to at least 95% of full-time employees can run into the tens of thousands of dollars annually.
Most route business owners who cross this threshold don’t realize it until after the fact. Tracking ACA status proactively, by monitoring full-time equivalent counts and hours monthly, is much less expensive than learning about the violation through an IRS notice. Netchex Benefits Administration tracks ACA eligibility automatically as your workforce grows, so you know when you’re approaching the threshold and what that means for your obligations.
Hiring at Scale: Where Route Operators Lose Control
Growing from 5 to 50 drivers means hiring dozens of people, often under time pressure. Routes need coverage. New packages mean new routes. The temptation is to compress the hiring process as headcount pressure increases.
That’s where documentation problems start. Background check records get inconsistent. I-9 verification gets rushed or delayed. Offer letters become informal or verbal. Employment agreements stop reflecting current pay structures. By the time you have 30 drivers on staff, the paperwork supporting those employment relationships may have significant gaps.
Those gaps matter in audits and in disputes. A driver claiming they were promised a different pay structure is a much bigger problem if you don’t have a signed offer letter documenting what was agreed. Netchex Hiring tools standardize the applicant-to-offer workflow so documentation is consistent regardless of how fast you’re growing.
And onboarding paperwork shouldn’t slow down route coverage. Digital onboarding lets new drivers complete all required paperwork, including I-9 verification, direct deposit setup, and tax forms, before their first day. Routes stay covered. Records stay clean.
Managing Multiple Routes Across Multiple Managers
At small scale, you’re the manager. At larger scale, you have route supervisors, shift leads, and area managers, each with visibility into their piece of the operation but not the whole picture. That’s where HR data fragmentation becomes a real operational risk.
Consider what happens when a driver raises a pay dispute with their route supervisor. If the supervisor can’t access payroll history, they escalate to you. If you have to dig through spreadsheets to reconstruct what happened, you’ve lost time and potentially the driver’s trust. The same problem applies to attendance records, performance documentation, and disciplinary history.
A unified HR platform gives managers the visibility they need at their level, while keeping sensitive payroll data appropriately restricted. Netchex HR is built for exactly this: role-based access means route supervisors can see what they need without seeing what they shouldn’t, and everything is in one system rather than spread across email threads and shared drives.
The Infrastructure Decision That Determines How Hard Scaling Is
Route businesses that build on spreadsheets and manual processes at 5 drivers hit a wall somewhere between 15 and 25 drivers. Everything that was manageable becomes unmanageable. The operators who scale past 50 with the least friction are almost always the ones who built on real HR and payroll infrastructure early, before they needed it urgently.
That infrastructure doesn’t mean complexity. Netchex Payroll and Tax runs payroll in about 15 minutes using OneScreen, regardless of whether you have 5 drivers or 75. Time and attendance data flows in automatically. Multi-state filings happen without manual tracking. Overtime calculates correctly. The system scales because it’s built to handle variable hourly workforces across multiple jurisdictions.
The operators who wait until they’re struggling at 30 drivers to build this infrastructure pay a higher price: they’re retrofitting systems while managing a growing operation simultaneously. It’s harder, it’s more expensive, and the compliance risk is elevated throughout the transition. Building the infrastructure at 5 drivers costs about the same as building it at 30. The operational benefit is dramatically higher when you start early.
Frequently Asked Questions
The best time is before you need it urgently, typically around 5 to 10 drivers. Route businesses that build on manual processes and spreadsheets hit a reliability and compliance wall somewhere between 15 and 25 drivers. Setting up proper payroll and HR infrastructure early costs about the same as doing it later but delivers significantly more operational benefit because the systems are in place before growth compounds the complexity.
The Affordable Care Act classifies employers with 50 or more full-time equivalent employees as Applicable Large Employers, requiring them to offer minimum essential health coverage to full-time employees. The FTE count includes part-time hours converted to full-time equivalents, so route businesses with many variable-hour drivers may cross this threshold without realizing it. Penalties for non-compliance can run tens of thousands of dollars annually.
The key elements are automated time tracking that feeds directly into payroll, multi-state tax handling if routes cross state lines, consistent overtime calculation, and documented pay structures for each driver tier. Manual processes that work at 5 drivers become unreliable at 20 and break down at 50. Unified payroll and HR software removes the manual coordination that creates errors as headcount grows.
At minimum: signed offer letters documenting pay structure and classification, completed I-9 forms for every employee, W-4 and state withholding forms, direct deposit authorizations, and records of any pay changes or disciplinary actions. As you cross certain headcount thresholds, ACA documentation requirements also apply. Gaps in this documentation create significant exposure in audits and wage disputes.
Most route operators can manage manual payroll reliably for 5 to 10 drivers if routes are simple and all drivers operate in one state. Above that, the complexity of variable hours, overtime calculations, multi-state filings, and benefits tracking typically exceeds what manual processes can handle accurately. The error rate and time cost increase substantially beyond 15 drivers.
Ready to Build Payroll and HR Infrastructure That Scales With Your Routes?
See how Netchex handles payroll, compliance, onboarding, and benefits for route businesses at any size.
This guide reflects publicly available product information and independent reviewer data (G2, Capterra, Trustpilot, Yelp, Better Business Bureau, Reddit, Software Advice, GetApp) as of 2026. Feature availability and pricing may vary by plan. Contact each provider for current details.
Disclaimer: Any product roadmap or future plans provided herein are for informational purposes only. They do not represent a commitment to deliver any material, code, feature, or functionality. Plans may change without notification. The development, release and timing of any features or functionality described remain at the sole discretion of Netchex, its affiliates, and partners. Netchex does not give legal, tax, or accounting advice. You are responsible for ensuring your use of Netchex product meets your individual business and compliance requirements.
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