Moving & Box Trucks

How to Back Up a Box Truck Into a Tight Driveway

Backing a box truck into a tight driveway comes down to a wide setup and careful mirror work. Here’s a box truck-specific method — the why, the steps, and the mistakes to skip.

Updated 2026-06-03 6 min read For movers & truck renters

Why a tight driveway is the hard part

A box truck is rigid — there’s no trailer behind a hitch, so it does NOT reverse-steer or jackknife like a towing rig. You back it like a long van: turn the wheel the way you want the back to go. The real challenges are its length and visibility — the tall box blocks your rear window entirely, so you back on mirrors and get-out-and-look.

A tight driveway with a box truck is about length and sight lines, not trailer angle. You steer directly — the back goes the way you turn the wheel — but the long body and the blind box behind you mean a wide setup and constant mirror checks.

The key with a box truck: A box truck isn’t a trailer — it steers directly in reverse (the back goes the way you turn), so there’s no counter-steering and no jackknife. The tight-driveway challenge is the length and the blind box behind you: set up wide, watch overhead for branches and wires, and back on your mirrors.

How to back up a box truck into a tight driveway, step by step

  1. Walk it and look up. Get out and look. Check both sides and overhead — a box truck is tall, so watch for branches, eaves, and wires.
  2. Set up wide. Approach at an angle so the long body has room to come around into the driveway rather than backing straight in.
  3. Steer toward your target. Turn the wheel the way you want the back to go. There’s no trailer to counter-steer — it backs like a long van.
  4. Lean on both mirrors. With no rear window, both side mirrors are your only view. Correct early and small.
  5. Get out and look again. Walk back whenever you lose the picture, and pull forward to reset if the angle is off.

Tips for backing a box truck

Also tow a trailer sometimes? That reverses the steering and adds a fold risk a box truck doesn’t have — see how to back up a trailer.

Frequently asked questions

How do you back a box truck into a tight driveway?

Set up wide and at an angle, steer the back directly toward the opening (no counter-steering — it’s not a trailer), and lean on both mirrors since there’s no rear window. Get out and look and pull forward to reset as needed.

How do you see behind a box truck?

Both side mirrors are your only rear view, so set them wide. Get out and look often, and a backup camera helps a lot — the tall box blocks the rear window completely.

Do you steer a box truck in reverse like a trailer?

No — a box truck is rigid, so it backs like a long van: turn the wheel the direction you want the rear to go. There’s no trailer to counter-steer and it can’t jackknife; the challenge is the length and the blind box.