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Salary Guide

OTR Driver Salary Guide (2026)

OTR company drivers earn $60,000-$90,000 per year, while owner-operators net $80,000-$120,000 after expenses. But actual pay varies widely based on experience, carrier, equipment type, and how you structure your operation. This guide breaks down every variable that affects OTR pay.

$60K-$90K

Company Driver OTR

$80K-$120K

Owner-Operator Net

$0.50-$0.70

CPM Range

2,500-3,000

Miles Per Week

OT

O Trucking Editorial Team

Trucking Industry Experts

Published: February 19, 2026Updated: February 19, 2026

Fact-Checked by O Trucking Dispatch Team

5+ years negotiating rates and tracking OTR driver earnings across all equipment types

5+ Years Experience80+ Carriers ServedIndustry Data Verified

This article was written by the O Trucking editorial team with 9+ years of combined trucking industry experience. Learn more about us.

OTR Company Driver Pay

Most OTR company drivers are paid per mile (CPM). Your annual income is a simple formula: CPM x weekly miles x weeks worked per year. Here is what that looks like in practice:

ScenarioCPMWeekly MilesWeekly PayAnnual (50 wks)
New driver (year 1)$0.452,200$990$49,500
1-2 years experience$0.522,500$1,300$65,000
3-5 years experience$0.602,700$1,620$81,000
5+ years / premium carrier$0.682,800$1,904$95,200
Team driver (per driver)$0.35 each5,000 (shared)$1,750$87,500

Beyond base CPM, most OTR carriers pay additional cents per mile for experience tiers, safety bonuses, fuel efficiency, and hazmat/tanker endorsements. Accessorial pay for detention, layover, and stop-offs adds $2,000-$5,000 per year for many OTR drivers.

OTR Pay by Experience Level

Experience is the single biggest factor in OTR pay progression. Here is the typical trajectory:

Year 1: $45,000-$60,000

Lower CPM ($0.40-$0.50), fewer miles while learning, and time spent in training. Most first-year drivers work for a training carrier. The silver lining: your living expenses are low because the carrier covers truck, fuel, insurance, and maintenance.

Years 2-3: $60,000-$80,000

You can now move to better-paying carriers. Your CPM jumps to $0.52-$0.62 with 2+ years of clean OTR experience. You run more miles because you are more efficient with your clock, and you qualify for specialized freight like reefer or flatbed.

Years 5+: $75,000-$95,000

Premium carriers recruit experienced OTR drivers at $0.60-$0.70+ CPM. You also qualify for dedicated accounts (consistent lanes, predictable schedules) that often pay premium rates. Many drivers at this stage consider owner-operator status to capture even higher earnings.

Per Diem Reduces Your Tax Burden

OTR drivers who are away from home overnight qualify for the IRS per diem deduction — $69/day for the continental US in 2026. On a 280-day-away OTR schedule, that is $19,320 in deductions. Some carriers offer per diem as a non-taxable portion of your pay (reducing your W-2 income), while owner-operators claim it directly. Either way, it significantly reduces your tax liability.

OTR Owner-Operator Income

Owner-operators running OTR can gross significantly more than company drivers, but expenses eat into that gross. Here is the real breakdown:

OTR Owner-Operator Annual Income (Typical)

Gross revenue$250,000-$350,000
Fuel (30-35% of gross)-$75,000 to -$120,000
Truck payment-$18,000 to -$30,000
Insurance-$12,000 to -$24,000
Maintenance & tires-$15,000 to -$25,000
Permits, ELD, misc-$5,000 to -$8,000
Net take-home$80,000-$120,000

Your cost per mile determines your actual profit. An OTR owner-operator with a paid-off truck and efficient fuel management can net significantly more than one with a $2,500/month truck payment. Track every expense and know your CPM down to the penny.

OTR Pay by Equipment Type

The trailer you pull directly affects your OTR earning potential:

EquipmentSpot Rate/MileCompany CPMNotes
Dry Van$2.30-$2.60$0.48-$0.65Most volume, most competition
Reefer$2.80-$3.20$0.52-$0.70Premium rates, higher fuel cost
Flatbed$2.50-$3.00+$0.55-$0.75Highest CPM, physical work

Flatbed Pays More for a Reason

Flatbed OTR drivers consistently earn the highest CPM because the work is more demanding — tarping, strapping, chaining, and inspecting open loads in all weather. The physical effort and skill required reduces the driver pool, which keeps rates elevated. If you are physically capable and do not mind the extra work, OTR flatbed is the highest-earning company driver category.

How to Maximize OTR Earnings

OTR income is not fixed — the drivers who earn the most take deliberate steps to maximize every variable:

Minimize deadhead — Every deadhead mile costs you money. Work with a dispatcher who plans 2-3 loads ahead to keep you loaded. Target less than 10% deadhead percentage on your total miles.

Master your HOS clock — Efficient HOS management means more productive miles per shift. Use split sleeper berth when it benefits your schedule. Minimize on-duty not driving time at shippers and receivers.

Target high-rate lanes — Not all OTR miles pay equally. Lanes out of major freight markets (LA, Chicago, Dallas, Atlanta) typically pay higher rates. Avoid getting stuck in low-rate outbound areas without a plan for the return trip.

Collect all accessorial pay — Do not leave money on the table. Claim detention pay for wait time, layover pay for overnight holds, and TONU for cancelled loads.

Add endorsements — Hazmat endorsement adds $0.03-$0.08 CPM at most carriers. Tanker endorsement opens up liquid bulk freight at premium rates. Both endorsements combined make you eligible for the highest-paying OTR freight.

How Our Dispatch Maximizes Your OTR Pay

At O Trucking LLC, every dispatch decision is made with your revenue in mind:

Rate negotiation on every load

We do not accept the first rate offered. Our dispatchers negotiate with brokers on every load, using current market data from load boards and rate tools to push for the best possible rate. An extra $0.10/mile on a 1,500-mile load is $150 more in your pocket.

Deadhead elimination through multi-load planning

We plan your next load before your current one delivers. By knowing where freight is available near your delivery point, we minimize the empty miles between loads. Our target is under 10% deadhead on total miles for every OTR driver we dispatch.

Accessorial pay tracking

We document detention time at every shipper and receiver, ensure layover pay is claimed when applicable, and negotiate TONU fees when loads are cancelled after you have already committed time. Every dollar of accessorial pay is money you earned and deserve to collect.

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