Updated May 2026

CDL Driver Salary in Warner Robins, Georgia (May 2026)

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CDL drivers in Warner Robins, Georgia earn $2,608 per week on average through May 2026. The median is $2,000, drawn from active job postings rather than survey self-reports. Based on 1,598 active CDL postings in Lanefinder's index. 31% of postings include a sign-on bonus, averaging $2,076. Georgia freight is anchored by the Port of Savannah — a top-tier US container gateway — and the Atlanta intermodal crossroads at I-75 / I-85 / I-20, making it the dominant Southeast distribution hub.

What changed in May 2026

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

Warner Robins, Georgia vs Georgia: the numbers that diverge

How Warner Robins, Georgia compares to Georgia
Warner Robins, GeorgiaGeorgia Delta
Average weekly pay$2,608$2,237+17%
Take-truck-home89%83%+6 pt
Pet-friendly fleets70%65%+5 pt
Riders-allowed policies68%63%+5 pt
OTR (long-haul) routes85%76%+9 pt

Source: Lanefinder index, May 2026

Warner Robins, Georgia's biggest divergence from Georgia is on average weekly pay, 17% above the state baseline.

Warner Robins, Georgia CDL salary by hiring type

Across active CDL postings in Warner Robins, Georgia 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 Warner Robins, Georgia
Hiring type Avg/wk Median/wk Active postings
Independent Contractor (1099)$2,071$1,985751
Company Driver (W2)$1,599$1,550463
Owner Operator$7,087$7,000384

Source: Lanefinder index, May 2026

What Warner Robins, Georgia drivers actually run

The route mix in Warner Robins, Georgia this month tilts OTR: 13% regional, 85% OTR, 0% local, 1% semi-local — drawn from active postings, not historical surveys.

Guaranteed pay is on offer at 2% of Warner Robins, Georgia postings; dedicated routes at 27%; take-truck-home at 89%. Pet-friendly policies appear at 70% and riders-allowed at 68%.

Driving CDL in Georgia

Georgia anchors the Southeast freight network through the Port of Savannah (a top-tier East Coast container gateway) and the Atlanta intermodal crossroads at I-75 / I-85 / I-20. Atlanta traffic is consistently top-tier US congestion — drivers based here either learn the off-peak windows or take a real income hit. Outside the metro, Georgia is one of the easier driving states: flat, mostly forgiving weather, no real mountain work. Reefer pulling poultry out of north-central Georgia is a steady regional segment. State income tax is moderate; cost of living statewide is below the national average. The Port of Savannah lanes are a steady driver-pay segment.

Where this data comes from

Pay carriers in the same market against each other (30% of the score). Add a five-dimension FMCSA safety percentile from SAFER (25%). Score benefits based on whether the carrier hires W2 drivers or contractors (25%). Layer on employer responsiveness and fleet scale (20%). The weights are fixed and public. Updated May 2026.

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