Updated May 2026

CDL Driver Salary in Oshkosh, Wisconsin (May 2026)

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As of May 2026, CDL drivers in Oshkosh, Wisconsin are earning a weekly average of $2,608 (median $2,000). Based on 1,451 active CDL postings in Lanefinder's index. 30% of postings include a sign-on bonus, averaging $2,049. Wisconsin freight moves on I-90 / I-94 through Milwaukee and Madison, with dairy and food processing as the dominant outbound commodity and paper and packaging manufacturing in the Fox River Valley generating consistent industrial loads.

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 Oshkosh, Wisconsin differs from the Wisconsin baseline

How Oshkosh, Wisconsin compares to Wisconsin
Oshkosh, WisconsinWisconsin Delta
Average weekly pay$2,608$2,211+18%
Take-truck-home89%81%+8 pt
Pet-friendly fleets72%65%+7 pt
Riders-allowed policies70%63%+7 pt
OTR (long-haul) routes88%75%+13 pt
Local routes1%7%-6 pt
Regional routes10%16%-6 pt

Source: Lanefinder index, May 2026

Oshkosh, Wisconsin's biggest divergence from Wisconsin is on average weekly pay, 18% above the state baseline.

Oshkosh, Wisconsin CDL salary by hiring type

Across active CDL postings in Oshkosh, Wisconsin 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 Oshkosh, Wisconsin
Hiring type Avg/wk Median/wk Active postings
Independent Contractor (1099)$2,239$2,050639
Company Driver (W2)$1,557$1,500461
Owner Operator$7,228$7,500351

Source: Lanefinder index, May 2026

What Oshkosh, Wisconsin drivers actually run

The route mix in Oshkosh, Wisconsin this month tilts OTR: 10% regional, 88% OTR, 1% local, 1% semi-local — drawn from active postings, not historical surveys.

Guaranteed pay is on offer at 1% of Oshkosh, Wisconsin postings; dedicated routes at 27%; take-truck-home at 89%. Pet-friendly policies appear at 72% and riders-allowed at 70%.

Driving CDL in Wisconsin

Wisconsin freight moves on I-90 / I-94 through Milwaukee and Madison. Dairy and food processing are dominant outbound commodities — Wisconsin's reefer freight is a national-scale segment. Paper and packaging manufacturing in the Fox River Valley generates consistent industrial loads. Great Lakes ports at Green Bay and Superior handle bulk cargo. Cost of living is moderate. Wisconsin has a high graduated state income tax. Winter is severe — lake-effect snow off Lake Michigan affects the eastern third of the state; ice and salt corrosion eat equipment faster than southern states.

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.

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