Updated May 2026

CDL Driver Salary in Norwalk, Connecticut (May 2026)

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Norwalk, Connecticut's CDL drivers earn $2,844 per week on average, $2,050 median, as of May 2026. Based on 1,266 active CDL postings in Lanefinder's index. 30% of postings include a sign-on bonus, averaging $2,041. Connecticut freight moves on I-95 and I-91 / I-84 connecting to the Northeast corridor, with Port of New Haven handling petroleum and heating oil (with breakbulk as a secondary segment) and a dense concentration of aerospace and defense manufacturing.

What changed in May 2026

We just started tracking monthly changes for this view. Check back next month to see how rankings have shifted.

Where Norwalk, Connecticut differs from the Connecticut baseline

How Norwalk, Connecticut compares to Connecticut
Norwalk, ConnecticutConnecticut Delta
Average weekly pay$2,844$2,563+11%
OTR (long-haul) routes85%80%+5 pt

Source: Lanefinder index, May 2026

Among the figures above, average weekly pay is where Norwalk, Connecticut differs most from Connecticut — 11% above statewide.

What CDL drivers are earning across Norwalk, Connecticut

Across active CDL postings in Norwalk, Connecticut this month, pay varies meaningfully by hiring type. The breakdown below shows the average and median weekly pay for each.

CDL weekly pay by hiring type in Norwalk, Connecticut
Hiring type Avg/wk Median/wk Active postings
Independent Contractor (1099)$2,227$2,015576
Company Driver (W2)$1,580$1,575370
Owner Operator$7,342$7,500320

Source: Lanefinder index, May 2026

Lane mix and benefits across Norwalk, Connecticut

10% of Norwalk, Connecticut's active CDL postings are regional and 85% are OTR; local plus semi-local accounts for the rest (5%).

Guaranteed pay is on offer at 1% of Norwalk, Connecticut postings; dedicated routes at 28%; take-truck-home at 85%. Pet-friendly policies appear at 68% and riders-allowed at 66%.

Driving CDL in Connecticut

Connecticut CDL work is mostly last-mile and short-haul on the dense I-95 / I-91 / I-84 metro grid feeding the Northeast corridor. The Port of New Haven handles breakbulk; aerospace and defense manufacturing (Pratt & Whitney in East Hartford, Sikorsky in Stratford, plus RTX-related supplier networks) generate high-value freight. Cost of living is among the highest in the country and state income tax is high. Many drivers based here run out-of-state lanes to keep the math working. Truck-route restrictions on parkways and dense urban congestion make CT one of the higher-overhead states to operate in.

How we compile these rankings

Carriers are scored against carriers in their own market. The composite is 30% compensation (pay + bonus + guaranteed pay + settlement cadence), 25% FMCSA safety, 25% benefits (W2 vs owner-op scoring), and 20% operational performance (responsiveness + fleet scale). No paid placement — the weights are the same for every carrier in the index. Updated May 2026.

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