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Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs

Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs: Job Description

Drive a motor vehicle to transport passengers on a planned or scheduled basis. May collect a fare. Includes nonemergency medical transporters and hearse drivers.

What Do Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs Do?

The day-to-day responsibilities of shuttle drivers and chauffeurs include:

  • Test vehicle equipment, such as lights, brakes, horns, or windshield wipers, to ensure proper operation.
  • Check the condition of a vehicle's tires, brakes, windshield wipers, lights, oil, fuel, water, and safety equipment to ensure that everything is in working order.
  • Comply with traffic regulations to operate vehicles in a safe and courteous manner.
  • Follow relevant safety regulations and state laws governing vehicle operation, and ensure that passengers follow safety regulations.
  • Operate vehicles with specialized equipment, such as wheelchair lifts, to transport and secure passengers with special needs.
  • Report any vehicle malfunctions or needed repairs.
  • Perform routine vehicle maintenance, such as regulating tire pressure and adding gasoline, oil, and water.
  • Pick up and drop off passengers at regularly scheduled neighborhood locations, following strict time schedules.

What Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs Need to Know

Top shuttle drivers and chauffeurs combine a mix of skills and domain knowledge.

Most Important Skills

The abilities most central to this role, rated on an importance scale of 0 to 5:

Active Listening  3.4 / 5
0
5
Operation and Control  3.2 / 5
0
5
Monitoring  3.2 / 5
0
5
Critical Thinking  3.2 / 5
0
5
Speaking  3.1 / 5
0
5
Operations Monitoring  3.1 / 5
0
5

Knowledge Areas

Customer and Personal Service  4.6 / 5
0
5
Transportation  4.5 / 5
0
5
Public Safety and Security  4.4 / 5
0
5
English Language  3.9 / 5
0
5
Personnel and Human Resources  3.8 / 5
0
5
Administrative  3.7 / 5
0
5

People in this occupation may also be known by titles such as:

  • Airport Apron Bus Driver
  • Airport Shuttle Driver
  • Airside Transfer Bus Driver
  • Bus Driver
  • Car Driver
  • Chauffeur
  • Corporate Driver
  • Courtesy Car Driver

How Many Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs Are There?

There are about 1,411,462 shuttle drivers and chauffeurs working in the United States today. Employment is projected to grow by +7.5% over the projection horizon.

Forecasted number of jobs for Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs

How Much Do Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs Make?

Statistic Value
Annual median $48,415
Hourly median $23.28
10th percentile $34,330
25th percentile $41,372
75th percentile $55,457
90th percentile $62,500

Pay can vary substantially based on experience, location, and industry.

Salary ranges for Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs

Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs Salary by State

State Annual median salary
District of Columbia $44,020
Washington $43,190
California $41,600
New York $41,580
Maryland $40,550
Vermont $40,080
Hawaii $39,880
New Jersey $39,830
Delaware $39,500
Massachusetts $38,920
Colorado $38,840
Minnesota $38,780
Utah $38,410
Alaska $37,380
Connecticut $37,370
Virginia $37,350
Maine $36,950
Illinois $36,880
Montana $36,780
North Dakota $36,760
Oregon $36,610
Arizona $36,540
Michigan $36,500
Nevada $35,990
Missouri $35,780
Idaho $35,770
Texas $35,590
Rhode Island $35,480
Virgin Islands $35,300
South Dakota $35,300
Pennsylvania $35,070
New Mexico $34,510
Florida $34,130
New Hampshire $33,610
Indiana $33,550
Tennessee $33,450
Nebraska $33,280
Kansas $33,120
Louisiana $33,040
Wyoming $32,500
Georgia $32,500
North Carolina $31,970
Kentucky $31,950
Ohio $31,650
Iowa $30,890
South Carolina $30,570
Oklahoma $30,330
Alabama $29,990
Wisconsin $29,430
Arkansas $28,810
Mississippi $28,400
West Virginia $27,740
Guam $25,960
Puerto Rico $20,320

Pay by U.S. Region

Compensation for shuttle drivers and chauffeurs shift depending on where you work. These regions lead on median pay:

Region Median annual wage Share of U.S. jobs Location quotient
Far Western US $40,822 17.0% 1.04
Middle Atlantic $39,169 20.7% 1.39
New England $38,003 7.7% 1.68
Rocky Mountains $37,800 3.2% 0.83
Plains States $35,771 7.6% 1.15
Southwest $35,462 8.9% 0.75
Great Lakes $33,536 15.1% 1.11
Southeast $33,106 19.0% 0.82

Where the Jobs Cluster

Metro area State Median annual wage Employment
Idaho Falls, ID ID $67,150 200
Kahului-Wailuku, HI HI $49,920 260
Bremerton-Silverdale-Port Orchard, WA WA $48,380 160
San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA CA $47,590 1,120
San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, CA CA $46,790 3,950
Bozeman, MT MT $46,480 100
Chico, CA CA $46,450 90
Coeur d'Alene, ID ID $45,780 80

Which Industries Hire Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs

The largest employers of shuttle drivers and chauffeurs are concentrated in the following sectors:

Industry Employment Median annual wage
Transportation and Warehousing 101,830 $37,940
Health Care and Social Assistance 49,830 $36,030
Retail Trade 18,900 $30,610
Other Services (except Public Administration) 13,240 $35,830
Accommodation and Food Services 7,320 $33,660
Educational Services 6,140 $37,480
Administrative and Support and Waste Management and Remediation Services 6,090 $38,010
Real Estate and Rental and Leasing 5,260 $34,960
Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs sectors

Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs work in the following industries:

Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs industries

Tech Stack

  • Web page creation and editing software: Facebook (hot technology)
  • Spreadsheet software: Microsoft Excel (hot technology)
  • Office suite software: Microsoft Office software (hot technology)
  • Operating system software: Microsoft Windows (hot technology)

What the Workplace Is Like

The work environment for shuttle drivers and chauffeurs reflects the following characteristics:

  • In an Enclosed Vehicle or Operate Enclosed Equipment
  • Physical Proximity
  • Deal With External Customers or the Public in General
  • Outdoors, Exposed to All Weather Conditions
  • Contact With Others

Getting Started in This Career

Typical shuttle drivers and chauffeurs positions require a high school diploma or equivalent as the typical entry-level education. This career aligns with Some Preparation Needed (Job Zone 2), indicating the level of preparation typically expected.

Similar Occupations

Similar Occupations

Top Programs to Study For This Career

Future shuttle drivers and chauffeurs typically earn programs in:

Transportation and Materials Moving

1 programs across 1 majors

Sources

This profile draws on the following authoritative sources:

  • U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) for employment and wage data by state and industry.
  • BLS Employment Projections for total employment and growth forecasts.
  • O*NET (Occupational Information Network) for skills, knowledge, tasks, work activities, work context, technology, and education-zone data.

SOC code: 53-3053.00 (Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs).

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