Your delivery drivers are your largest expense — and your largest compliance risk. A 25-route Amazon DSP with 60 drivers spends $2.0-$2.4 million per year on Amazon DSP driver payroll between base wages, overtime, benefits, and payroll taxes. Get any of it wrong and you’re facing wage claims, DOL audits, or Amazon contract termination.
This isn’t generic payroll advice. This guide covers the specific payroll requirements, compliance traps, and cost realities that Amazon DSP owners deal with every pay period. For the complete financial management picture, see our Amazon DSP bookkeeping guide.
This is non-negotiable: Amazon requires all DSP drivers to be W-2 employees. Not 1099 independent contractors. Not temp agency workers. Full employees of your DSP entity.
This requirement exists because Amazon’s delivery model fails every prong of the IRS common law test and the DOL’s economic reality test for contractor classification:
Any DSP owner who attempts to classify drivers as independent contractors faces exposure from three directions simultaneously: the IRS (payroll tax liability + penalties), the DOL (back wages + overtime + damages), and Amazon (contract termination). The combined exposure for a 50-driver DSP that misclassified for two years could exceed $500,000.
No exceptions: Even if a driver works only 2 days per week or drives their own vehicle for overflow routes, they must be classified as W-2 if they’re delivering Amazon packages under your DSP agreement. The arrangement meets every test for employment, regardless of hours worked.
Amazon DSP drivers must be paid at least the applicable minimum wage — which is the highest of federal, state, or local minimums. Amazon also sets its own floor: DSP contracts typically require a minimum starting wage of $16.50-$21.00/hour depending on the market, which exceeds the federal minimum in all cases.
Key compliance points:
Amazon delivery routes typically run 9-10 hours per day. At 5-6 days per week, most drivers accumulate 45-55 hours weekly. Under the FLSA, all hours over 40 in a workweek must be paid at 1.5x the regular rate.
Common overtime mistakes DSP owners make:
Amazon doesn’t just require W-2 classification — they mandate specific benefits that most small businesses don’t offer. These requirements are part of your DSP contract and Amazon audits compliance:
| Benefit | Amazon Requirement | Annual Cost Per Driver |
|---|---|---|
| Health insurance | Must offer qualifying plan to full-time drivers (30+ hrs/wk) | $4,800 – $7,200 |
| 401(k) retirement plan | Must offer with employer match (varies by contract) | $1,200 – $2,000 |
| Paid time off | Minimum PTO accrual (typically 40-80 hrs/year) | $1,600 – $2,400 |
| Paid sick leave | As required by state/local law + Amazon policy | $400 – $800 |
Health insurance is the biggest benefits cost. Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), DSPs with 50+ full-time equivalent employees must offer minimum essential coverage or face penalties of $2,880 per employee per year (2026 rate). Most DSPs with 20+ routes exceed this threshold.
The practical approach: offer a qualifying plan where the employer covers 60-80% of the employee-only premium. Budget $400-$600/month per enrolled driver. Not all drivers will enroll (typical take-up rate is 40-60%), which reduces your actual cost per headcount.
401(k) administration requires a third-party administrator (TPA) and annual compliance testing. Budget $2,000-$5,000/year for plan administration plus your matching contribution. Most DSP contracts require a 3-4% match on employee contributions.
Pro Tip: Track benefits enrollment by driver in your payroll system, not a separate spreadsheet. When a driver leaves (and they will — see turnover section below), you need to trigger COBRA notices within 14 days. If benefits data lives outside payroll, COBRA deadlines get missed and you face $110/day penalties per affected individual.
Here’s the complete cost picture for an Amazon DSP driver in a mid-cost market, working an average of 50 hours per week:
| Cost Component | Weekly | Annual | % of Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base wages (40 hrs x $19/hr) | $760 | $39,520 | 51% |
| Overtime (10 hrs x $28.50/hr) | $285 | $14,820 | 19% |
| Employer FICA (7.65%) | $80 | $4,157 | 5% |
| FUTA + SUTA | $12 | $624 | 1% |
| Health insurance (employer share) | $115 | $5,980 | 8% |
| 401(k) match (3%) | $31 | $1,630 | 2% |
| PTO accrual (2 weeks) | $29 | $1,520 | 2% |
| Workers’ compensation | $67 | $3,500 | 5% |
| Recruiting & training (amortized) | $19 | $1,000 | 1% |
| Uniforms & equipment | $8 | $400 | 1% |
| Payroll processing fees | $6 | $312 | <1% |
| Total fully loaded cost | $1,412 | $73,463 | 100% |
That’s $73,463/year per driver — or $35.32/hour fully loaded on a $19/hour base wage. The burden rate is 86% above base wages.
For a 60-driver operation, total payroll cost: $4.4 million/year. If your DSP generates $3.5M in revenue, labor alone consumes 126% of income. That math only works because the table above assumes a mid-range market — high-volume DSPs with 25+ routes may generate $4M-$5M — but it illustrates why payroll precision is existential for DSP profitability.
Amazon DSP driver turnover rates run 80-150% annually. That means a 60-driver DSP replaces 48-90 drivers per year. Each replacement costs $3,000-$5,000:
| Turnover Cost Component | Cost Per Replacement |
|---|---|
| Job posting & recruiting | $200 – $500 |
| Background check & drug screen | $75 – $150 |
| DOT physical (if applicable) | $80 – $150 |
| Training (1-2 weeks paid, non-productive) | $1,500 – $2,000 |
| Nursery route productivity loss (weeks 3-6) | $800 – $1,200 |
| Manager time (interviews, onboarding, mentoring) | $500 – $800 |
| Uniforms & equipment | $150 – $300 |
| Total per replacement | $3,305 – $5,100 |
At 80% turnover with 60 drivers, that’s $158,640-$244,800/year in turnover costs — money that doesn’t show up in a single line item on your P&L but is spread across recruiting, training, and lost productivity accounts.
A $1/hour raise across 60 drivers costs $124,800/year in total loaded cost. If that raise reduces turnover from 100% to 60% (a reasonable expectation based on industry data), you save 24 fewer replacements x $4,200 average = $100,800/year. The net cost of the raise: $24,000/year — a fraction of what most DSP owners assume.
Track turnover cost as a KPI. If you’re spending more on replacing drivers than you would on retaining them, the math is obvious.
Amazon Peak Season (mid-November through late December) increases package volume by 40-80%. Most DSPs add routes and drivers during this period, which creates a payroll surge:
| Metric | Normal Season | Peak Season | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Routes per day | 25 | 32 – 38 | +28% to +52% |
| Drivers on payroll | 60 | 80 – 95 | +33% to +58% |
| Avg hours per driver/week | 48 | 55 – 60 | +15% to +25% |
| Weekly payroll | $63,000 | $95,000 – $120,000 | +51% to +90% |
| Monthly payroll | $252,000 | $380,000 – $480,000 | +51% to +90% |
Peak season payroll can nearly double — but Amazon’s peak season pay rates also increase. The key is timing: you start hiring and training drivers in September/October (non-productive payroll) to have them route-ready by mid-November. Your books should track peak season hiring costs separately so you can evaluate whether the incremental revenue justified the incremental labor cost.
Cash flow warning: Peak season creates a dangerous cash flow gap. You’re paying 50-90% more in payroll for 4-6 weeks before the corresponding peak settlement payments fully catch up. Budget a cash reserve of at least 2 extra weeks of peak payroll ($190,000-$240,000 for a 25-route DSP) before Peak Season starts.
Not all payroll platforms handle DSP requirements well. You need a system that supports:
Recommended platforms for DSPs:
Avoid using QuickBooks Payroll for DSPs above 30 drivers — it lacks the workers’ comp integration, benefits administration, and custom pay code flexibility that larger DSPs need. Use QuickBooks for accounting and a dedicated payroll platform for payroll, with a clean sync between the two.
After working with delivery and logistics businesses, these are the payroll errors we see most frequently:
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