If you’re hearing crickets when you post “Diesel Technician Wanted,” you’re not alone. The shortage has matured into a full-blown capacity risk for independent and mid-sized heavy-duty shops. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects roughly 28,000 diesel tech openings a year through 2030, while schools produce only about 10,000 new techs annually, leaving thousands of bays understaffed.
Below is a practical, high-ROI playbook you can put to work immediately: build school pipelines, formalize referrals, go all-in on digital recruiting, sell your culture and career path, and modernize your workflow with ShopView so candidates see a shop that runs like a business, because it is.
Retirements are accelerating faster than program enrollments, so you have to meet future techs before they hit the job market. Show up at local high schools, community colleges, and SkillsUSA diesel programs to speak, host shop tours, and offer ride-alongs. In one WrenchWay poll, more than 90% of technicians said they’d speak at a school, tap your own team to join you.
Don’t stop at career days. Offer paid internships or apprenticeships and donate obsolete but usable components to keep campus labs current. Programs like WrenchWay School Assist make school - shop matchmaking simple (guest speakers, tool donations, tours).
And raise your profile by supporting skills competitions, they attract ambitious, already-employed techs. Fleets and shops that sponsor or participate in SkillsUSA/TMC events consistently report stronger recruiting and retention signals.
Action checklist
Most employed technicians aren’t combing job boards, but ~85% say they’re open to new opportunities. That’s why referrals are your fastest, lowest-CAC channel. Launch (and loudly promote) a simple program: $1,000+ bonus when a referred hire stays 30 - 90 days; consider split payouts at hire and at 90 days to reinforce retention.
Why it works: your people already know capable techs whose values match your shop. A structured referral program consistently outperforms agencies and generic ads on time-to-hire and quality-of-hire. (And yes, $1,000 is table stakes in today’s market.)
Action checklist
Newspaper classifieds won’t fill modern bays. Your recruiting mix should include major boards (Indeed, ZipRecruiter) plus niche platforms like WrenchWay’s Top Shops, where diesel candidates actually browse detailed pay, equipment lists, and culture notes. Build a dedicated Careers page that shows shop life, not just a form, photos, day-in-the-life video, training, pay ranges, and benefits.
Go where candidates scroll: Facebook and LinkedIn posts/ads, short Reels/TikToks featuring quick wins in the bay (with safety rules followed), and YouTube pre-roll geo-targeted to your hiring radius. Recruiting pros increasingly layer AI-assist tools (e.g., HireEZ, SeekOut) to source passive candidates and keep outreach consistent.
Don’t forget grassroots channels in your market: flyers at truck stops and parts counters, local radio mentions, and CDL school bulletin boards still drive applicants in many communities.
Action checklist
This is where many shops miss: job ads that list duties but not why a tech should choose you. In 2025 data from WrenchWay, 78% of technicians say higher pay is the most urgent fix; right behind it are proper equipment, paid training, and PTO. Publish your pay band and show how top performers advance. Consider compressed schedules (4×10s), tool stipends, and paid certification days.
Broaden the pool: women hold only ~4% of technician roles. Shops that actively recruit and promote women benefit from a largely untapped channel of skilled, motivated candidates, and strengthen culture and customer trust.
Action checklist
Top technicians want shops that are organized, modern, and sane. When candidates see you’re running ShopView, with digital work orders, real-time scheduling, integrated DVIR/DOT/IFTA, and live parts inventory, they understand they’ll spend more time wrenching and less time chasing signatures or parts.
And the ROI is not theoretical. Increasing throughput by just two extra jobs per bay per day at ~$800/RO stacks up to ~$35,000 extra revenue per bay per month. Meanwhile, typical downtime costs run $450 - $760 per truck-day (often higher), so preventing even one emergency breakdown with telematics-driven PM can pay for software outright.
Action checklist
Week 1 - 2: Foundation
Week 3 - 4: Outreach
Week 5 - 6: Process
How can I recruit more diesel mechanics fast?
Layer a referral program ($1,000+), niche boards (WrenchWay), and social video ads within a 25 - 50 mile radius. Book two school touchpoints per month and sponsor a local skills challenge. Then show off your tech stack (ShopView, modern tools, training) on your Careers page.
Do apprenticeships really pay off for smaller shops?
Yes, apprenticeships create loyal talent and lower churn. Tie progression to competencies and pair each apprentice with a paid mentor.
What do diesel techs care about most?
Pay leads (78% say it’s the top issue), followed by equipment quality and paid training/PTO. Publish ranges, fund tools, and schedule training days.
How does software help recruiting?
Candidates notice organized, efficient operations. ShopView’s telematics, DVIR/DOT/IFTA, scheduling, and inventory controls cut admin time and chaos, freeing techs to turn wrenches and boosting ARO/throughput.
The diesel tech shortage won’t solve itself. Shops that build school pipelines, activate referrals, market where techs actually are, pay and train competitively, and prove they’re modern will fill bays faster, and keep them filled. ShopView helps you deliver the efficiency story techs want to hear and the ROI owners need to see.
Ready to fill your bays and boost profits?
Book a Free ShopView Demo to see DVIR/DOT/IFTA automations, telematics integrations, scheduling, and inventory in action, then use that tour video right on your Careers page.