Hiring skilled heavy-duty mechanics has never been harder-or more critical. As of 2025, 65.5% of diesel repair shops are understaffed, with nearly 20% of positions unfilled. Every hire matters. A strong mechanic quickly pays for themselves in billable hours and reduced downtime, while a poor hire can cost your shop upwards of $6,000 in turnover, lost productivity, and rework.
This guide shows you how to use effective interview techniques to separate the candidates who just talk a big game from the ones who can truly keep your bays profitable. We’ll cover pre-screening, technical assessments, behavioral questions, reference checks, and onboarding, plus how digital shop management tools like ShopView support hiring, training, and retention.
Shops aren’t just competing with each other for mechanics-they’re competing with fleets, dealers, and even other industries. The skills gap is real: even 30% of mechanics with formal training lack essential competencies.
The stakes are higher than in auto repair:
At the same time, modern trucks are becoming rolling computers. With telematics integration, digital inspections, and SaaS-based shop software growing rapidly, today’s hires must be comfortable with both a wrench and a tablet.
That means your interview process must go deeper - screening for skills, mindset, and adaptability.
Your time is valuable. Pre-screen candidates before they walk in.
Use the phone screen to gauge attitude and fit. Heavy-duty shops are often tight-knit; if a candidate constantly blames past employers or brags without humility, that’s a warning sign.
Talk is cheap-skills aren’t. Incorporate a practical test or “working interview.”
Examples include:
Watch for:
If logistics don’t allow a hands-on test, ask scenario-based technical questions such as:
Use a scorecard covering core areas-diesel engines, hydraulics, electrical, brakes, welding-and have a senior tech sit in. This makes candidate comparison objective.
Technical skills get trucks rolling, but attitude keeps your shop culture strong.
Sample questions:
Watch for humility and pride in work. The best hires admit when they don’t know something, value safety, and keep learning.
Don’t skip references. Supervisors can confirm what resumes can’t.
Questions to ask:
If a reference hesitates here, take it as a red flag.
Also consider background checks, drug tests, and certification verification. In a high-safety environment, shortcuts here are costly.
Once you’ve found your candidate:
Nearly half of new techs leave within two years when onboarding is poor. Make their first 90 days count.
Hiring isn’t an HR exercise-it’s a profitability driver.
But great hires only reach their potential in an efficient, modern shop. That’s where ShopView comes in:
Shops using ShopView typically save 1.5 admin hours per tech per day and recover over $100K in missed work annually. That means your hiring efforts pay off faster.
Hiring the right heavy-duty mechanic isn’t just about filling a vacancy-it’s about maximizing every bay’s revenue potential while protecting safety and culture.
The formula is simple:
Pair that with the right shop management system, and you’ll build a team that keeps trucks moving, customers loyal, and your bottom line growing.
👉 Ready to strengthen your shop team and streamline operations? Book a free demo of ShopView to see how modern software turns good hires into great results.