Updated May 2026

CDL Driver Salary in Rochester, Minnesota (May 2026)

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Rochester, Minnesota's CDL drivers earn $2,641 per week on average, $2,000 median, as of May 2026. Based on 1,400 active CDL postings in Lanefinder's index. 30% of postings include a sign-on bonus, averaging $2,100. Minnesota freight moves on the I-35 / I-94 Twin Cities metro grid and reaches the Great Lakes at Duluth, with large agricultural export volumes — soybeans, corn, and wheat — and a significant medical-device manufacturing sector.

What changed in May 2026

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

Rochester, Minnesota vs Minnesota: the numbers that diverge

How Rochester, Minnesota compares to Minnesota
Rochester, MinnesotaMinnesota Delta
Average weekly pay$2,641$2,405+10%
OTR (long-haul) routes90%84%+6 pt

Source: Lanefinder index, May 2026

The largest gap is on average weekly pay: Rochester, Minnesota sits 10% above the Minnesota baseline.

What CDL drivers are earning across Rochester, Minnesota

Across active CDL postings in Rochester, Minnesota 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 Rochester, Minnesota
Hiring type Avg/wk Median/wk Active postings
Independent Contractor (1099)$2,250$2,050619
Company Driver (W2)$1,582$1,550439
Owner Operator$7,183$7,250342

Source: Lanefinder index, May 2026

What Rochester, Minnesota drivers actually run

Of active CDL postings in Rochester, Minnesota this month, 9% are regional and 90% are OTR (long-haul). Local and semi-local routes account for the remaining 1%.

Across Rochester, Minnesota CDL postings: 1% with guaranteed pay, 27% dedicated, 88% take-truck-home, 73% pet-friendly, 71% riders-allowed.

Driving CDL in Minnesota

Minnesota freight moves on the I-35 / I-94 Twin Cities grid and reaches the Great Lakes at Duluth, a significant Lake Superior port. Agricultural exports — soybeans, corn, wheat — drive heavy outbound volume. A significant medical-device manufacturing sector (Medtronic and others) generates high-value freight. Winter is the dominant operational variable: sub-zero stretches affect equipment, idle-time policy, and HOS realism. Minnesota has a high graduated state income tax — among the higher rates in the country. The Twin Cities have unusually-designed truck-restricted bridges; first-time runs should consult routing notes carefully.

How we compile these rankings

Lanefinder's ranking algorithm weights compensation at 30%, FMCSA SAFER safety at 25%, benefits at 25%, and operational performance at 20%. Compensation reflects pay percentile plus sign-on bonus, guaranteed pay, and settlement-frequency adjustments. Benefits scoring is hiring-type-aware. Operational performance comes mostly from how carriers handle real driver applications. Updated May 2026.

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