Updated May 2026
CDL Driver Salary in Detroit, Michigan (May 2026)
Through May 2026, Detroit, Michigan CDL drivers earn $2,582 per week on average. The median is $2,000; the distribution by hiring type and the active-posting count both follow. Based on 1,545 active CDL postings in Lanefinder's index. 31% of postings include a sign-on bonus, averaging $2,013. Detroit is the US automotive manufacturing heartland with dense parts-and-assembly flows on I-94 / I-75 and the Ambassador Bridge to Windsor — the busiest US-Canada crossing by freight value, though the Blue Water Bridge at Port Huron overtook it on truck count in 2025.
What changed in May 2026
We just started tracking monthly changes for this view. Check back next month to see how rankings have shifted.
How Detroit, Michigan compares to Michigan
| Detroit, Michigan | Michigan | Delta | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average weekly pay | $2,582 | $2,114 | +22% |
| Take-truck-home | 86% | 80% | +6 pt |
| Pet-friendly fleets | 70% | 65% | +5 pt |
| Riders-allowed policies | 67% | 62% | +5 pt |
| OTR (long-haul) routes | 82% | 72% | +10 pt |
| Local routes | 3% | 8% | -5 pt |
| Regional routes | 14% | 19% | -5 pt |
Source: Lanefinder index, May 2026
Detroit, Michigan's biggest divergence from Michigan is on average weekly pay, 22% above the state baseline.
Detroit, Michigan CDL salary by hiring type
Across active CDL postings in Detroit, Michigan this month, pay varies meaningfully by hiring type. The breakdown below shows the average and median weekly pay for each.
| Hiring type | Avg/wk | Median/wk | Active postings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Independent Contractor (1099) | $2,216 | $2,000 | 666 |
| Company Driver (W2) | $1,552 | $1,500 | 519 |
| Owner Operator | $7,118 | $7,000 | 360 |
Source: Lanefinder index, May 2026
What Detroit, Michigan drivers actually run
14% of Detroit, Michigan's active CDL postings are regional and 82% are OTR; local plus semi-local accounts for the rest (4%).
Guaranteed pay is on offer at 1% of Detroit, Michigan postings; dedicated routes at 28%; take-truck-home at 86%. Pet-friendly policies appear at 70% and riders-allowed at 67%.
Driving CDL in Michigan
Michigan is the US automotive heartland — a huge share of CDL work in the state is tied to auto-parts inbound or finished-vehicle outbound. Detroit / Dearborn / Flint lanes have a distinctive operational rhythm that follows plant production schedules, including layoff weeks where freight volume drops significantly. Winter is the dominant operational variable: lake-effect snow off Lake Michigan can shut down west-side runs, and the freeze-thaw cycle on I-94, I-75, and I-96 means road surfaces are rough year-round. State income tax is flat and moderate. The Upper Peninsula is genuinely remote — long stretches with no fuel stops or services — and most newer drivers shouldn't take UP loads until they've learned the territory.
Related guides
- Best trucking companies in Detroit, Michigan
- Best owner-operator companies in Detroit, Michigan
- CDL driver salary in Michigan
Where this data comes from
Composite-score formula: compensation × 0.30, FMCSA safety × 0.25, benefits × 0.25, operational performance × 0.20. Compensation is anchored on pay percentile and lifted by sign-on bonus tier and guaranteed-pay availability. Operational performance is built mostly from driver-application response data in Lanefinder's platform, with fleet-scale percentile contributing a smaller portion. Updated May 2026.