JourneyCareersBus Driver
Global Career Guide (EN)From Transport & Logistics β†’

Bus Driver

AI

A bus driver carries passengers safely along set routes, sticking to a timetable while handling fares and helping people on and off. It suits patient, reliable people who like being out and about, enjoy meeting the public and don't mind the responsibility of carrying a lot of passengers.

The role

What a bus driver actually does, day to day.

The job is driving the route safely and on time, taking fares or checking passes, helping passengers including older or disabled people, and staying calm in traffic and bad weather. Patience, good concentration and a friendly, even temper matter, as you deal with all sorts of passengers and busy roads all day.

Shifts often start very early or run late, including weekends and bank holidays, and a lot of the day is spent sitting and concentrating. Pay is usually a steady hourly or salaried wage that rises with experience, and the role comes with a clear set of rules on driving hours and breaks.

By law you need a PCV (Passenger Carrying Vehicle) licence and a Driver CPC qualification, which the bus company often helps you train for after you pass medical and background checks. You usually need to be over a minimum age and hold a full car licence first.

A typical week

Day to day

1Drive the route safely and to timetable
2Take fares and check tickets or passes
3Help passengers on and off, including those with disabilities
4Carry out safety checks on the bus
5Stay calm in traffic and bad weather
6Answer passenger questions and give information
7Report faults, delays or incidents