5 Reasons to Visit a CDL School Before You Enroll
Choosing a CDL school is not a small decision. It takes real money, real time, and a genuine commitment to change careers. A website can describe a program. A brochure can list features. But neither one tells a prospective student what it actually feels like to walk through the door.
A campus visit does. At Southwest Truck Driver Training, students who come to see the Phoenix or Tucson campus in person almost always say the same thing: they knew this was the right school the moment they arrived. That kind of confidence matters before training even begins, and it’s why visiting a campus is so important.
1. See the Equipment Firsthand
The quality of the training fleet directly affects the quality of the training. That is not an opinion. It is a practical reality that shows up on the first day behind the wheel.
At Southwest Truck Driver Training, both campuses operate late-model commercial trucks that reflect what students will actually drive on the job. Every truck in the fleet is custom-modified for training: a small group of students can observe from a designated seating area at the rear of the cab while the student driver and instructor work up front. That setup is not common. Most schools do not offer it.
Both automatic and manual transmission trucks are available. Many CDL programs train on one type only. Southwest offers both because employers use both.
A campus visit lets prospective students see this equipment up close, sit in the cab, and understand exactly what their tuition provides. That kind of clarity is hard to get from a photo.

2. Meet the Instructors Who Will Train You
Instructors make the difference between a student who passes a test and a student who is actually ready for the job. The best way to assess an instructor is to meet one.
Southwest Truck Driver Training selects instructors for more than their driving records. Teaching requires patience, honesty, and a genuine investment in each student they work with. Southwest instructors are expected to bring all three, every day.
Many are military veterans. For students with a military background, that shared experience creates an immediate connection. All of them have driven the roads students will eventually drive, and they teach from that experience directly.
When a prospective student visits campus, they can ask questions, observe how instructors interact with current students, and decide whether the environment feels right. That conversation is not available on a website.
3. Get a Feel for the Culture
Southwest Truck Driver Training posts its philosophy at the entrance of both campuses. Not as decoration, but because it reflects how the school operates every day. It boils down to one important thing: Our student is the most important person on campus.
When Southwest employees are asked what makes the school different, the answer is always the same: the people and the environment.
That environment is not something a prospective student can measure from the outside. It has to be experienced. A campus visit puts people inside the culture before they commit. Those who visit Southwest consistently report that the staff was welcoming from the first interaction, that the atmosphere was professional without being cold, and that students on campus seemed genuinely engaged.
That is not accidental. It is the result of 25 years of building a school around the right values.

4. Understand Career Support Before You Need It
Getting a CDL is the goal. Getting a good job with it is the point.
A campus visit is a good time to ask direct questions about our career services: which carriers recruit from this school, what kinds of positions graduates typically pursue, and what support looks like after graduation.
Southwest Truck Driver Training is an independent school with no carrier affiliation. That distinction matters. Graduates are not steered toward any single employer. They choose where they want to work, and the career services team supports that decision. Lifetime career assistance is included with every program, meaning support is available long after graduation, not just in the first few weeks.
Carrier partners include national employers like Werner and Schneider. Local, regional, and OTR positions are all within reach. A campus visit is the right time to learn how all of that works and what it means for your specific career goal.
5. Confirm That On-Campus CDL Testing Is Available
Not every CDL school is a state-certified testing site. Many require students to schedule a skills exam at a separate facility after completing their program. That adds time and stress. It also puts students in an unfamiliar environment when it matters most.
Both the Phoenix and Tucson campuses at Southwest Truck Driver Training are state-certified CDL skills exam testing locations. Students test where they trained, on the same range with the same equipment.
During a campus visit, prospective students can see the testing range, ask how the process works, and understand exactly what exam day will look like. That kind of preparation is not possible without seeing the campus.

What to Look For During a Campus Visit
A productive campus visit covers more than a quick walkthrough. Prospective students should pay attention to a few specific things while on-site.
- Condition and age of the training trucks
- Size and layout of the training range
- How instructors interact with students currently in the program
- Whether staff is straightforward when answering questions about costs and scheduling
- The overall atmosphere from the moment of arrival
Bring questions. A school with nothing to hide will answer them directly.
Bring Your Family
A career change affects more than the person making it. Southwest Truck Driver Training is a family-owned school, and the staff genuinely welcomes families on campus visits.
A spouse, parent, or partner who sees the facility and meets the staff can support your decision with confidence. That support matters during a program as intensive as CDL training.
Frequently Asked Questions About Visiting Southwest Truck Driver Training
Can anyone schedule a campus visit at Southwest Truck Driver Training?
Yes. Both the Phoenix and Tucson campuses welcome prospective students and their families. Visits can be scheduled by calling the campus directly or by submitting an inquiry online.
What should a prospective student bring to a campus visit?
No special preparation is required. Bringing a list of questions and a valid ID is helpful, particularly if the visit includes a conversation with the admissions team about enrollment requirements.
Is there a cost to visit a Southwest Truck Driver Training campus?
No. Campus visits are free. There is no obligation to enroll.
What programs can be discussed during a campus visit?
All programs are available to discuss, including:
Business development training for employers can also be addressed.
How long does a typical campus visit take?
Most visits take between 30 and 60 minutes depending on the questions a prospective student brings. Longer visits are welcome.
Can prospective students meet current students during a visit?
Depending on the schedule, prospective students may have the opportunity to observe classes or speak with students currently enrolled in a program.
Where are the Southwest Truck Driver Training campuses located?
The Phoenix campus is at 2323 S. 51st Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85043. The Tucson campus is at 1230 W. Glenn St., Tucson, AZ 85705.
Schedule a Visit
Southwest Truck Driver Training has been putting Arizona CDL drivers on the road since 1999. The programs are real. The equipment is current. The instructors are experienced. The environment speaks for itself.
Come see it. Call the Phoenix campus at (833) 464-0743 or the Tucson campus at (833) 464-0768. Walk-ins are also welcome during business hours.