Updated May 2026
CDL Driver Salary in North Carolina (May 2026)
Through May 2026, North Carolina CDL drivers earn $2,219 per week on average. The median is $1,800; the distribution by hiring type and the active-posting count both follow. Based on 2,118 active CDL postings in Lanefinder's index. 30% of postings include a sign-on bonus, averaging $2,073. North Carolina freight moves on I-85 through the Charlotte-to-Raleigh-Durham manufacturing corridor and I-95 north-south, with Port of Wilmington handling containerized exports and a large furniture and textiles production base.
What changed in May 2026
We just started tracking monthly changes for this view. Check back next month to see how rankings have shifted.
What CDL drivers are earning across North Carolina
Across active CDL postings in North Carolina 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) | $2,000 | $1,900 | 900 |
| Company Driver (W2) | $1,472 | $1,450 | 800 |
| Owner Operator | $6,991 | $7,000 | 418 |
Source: Lanefinder index, May 2026
Lane mix and benefits across North Carolina
The route mix in North Carolina this month tilts OTR: 17% regional, 76% OTR, 4% local, 2% semi-local — drawn from active postings, not historical surveys.
Across North Carolina CDL postings: 2% with guaranteed pay, 28% dedicated, 82% take-truck-home, 65% pet-friendly, 63% riders-allowed.
Driving CDL in North Carolina
North Carolina CDL work spans a broad mix — port-and-container out of Wilmington and Morehead City, manufacturing in the Triangle (Raleigh-Durham), distribution and textile freight around Charlotte, and tobacco / agricultural loads from the eastern half of the state. The driver-experience profile is generally favorable: moderate winters, no significant mountain work outside the western tip, and a cost of living well below the national average even in the metro areas. State income tax is flat and moderate. I-85 between Greensboro and Charlotte is one of the busier Southeast freight lanes; weekday congestion through Greensboro is a planning variable. NC is one of the better states for a new CDL driver to build experience without immediately running mountains or severe weather.
Related guides
- Best trucking companies in North Carolina
- Best owner-operator companies in North Carolina
- CDL driver salary in the United States
How we compile these rankings
The score is built from four buckets. Thirty percent compensation, drawn from real active job postings and modified by bonus and settlement structure. Twenty-five percent safety, from FMCSA SAFER. Twenty-five percent benefits, scored hiring-type-aware. Twenty percent operational performance, drawn from how carriers actually behave toward applicants. Updated May 2026.