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Truck Driver Salary in Idaho

Complete 2026 salary data for CDL and non-CDL truck drivers in Idaho. Compare pay by license type, see cost of living adjustments, and find the highest-paying cities.

CDL-A Avg

$54,200

CDL-B Avg

$43,800

Non-CDL Avg

$37,500

Owner-Op Gross

$185,000

Salary Comparison by License Type

How Idaho truck driver pay compares across CDL-A, CDL-B, non-CDL, and owner-operator categories.

CDL-A
$54,200
CDL-B
$43,800
Non-CDL
$37,500
Owner-Op (Gross)
$185,000

Cost of Living in Idaho

Cost of Living Index97
Low Cost (80)National Avg (100)High Cost (170)

Idaho's cost of living is 3% below the national average. Your salary stretches further here than in most states.

Cost-of-Living Adjusted Pay

Nominal CDL-A Salary

$54,200

Adjusted Purchasing Power

$55,876

After adjusting for Idaho's cost of living index of 97, a CDL-A salary of $54,200 provides the same purchasing power as $55,876 in an average-cost area. This means your money goes further in Idaho than the raw salary suggests.

Top Paying Cities in Idaho

These cities offer the highest average truck driver salaries in Idaho based on freight volume, distribution center density, and local demand.

1. Boise
$58,600
2. Idaho Falls
$55,200
3. Twin Falls
$53,800

Salary Trend in Idaho

Risingvs. national avg: $58,710

Idaho trucking wages are increasing as population growth in the Boise metro area drives distribution expansion. Agricultural hauling (potatoes, dairy) and lumber remain steady freight sources.

Idaho vs National Average

CategoryIDNationalDifference
CDL-A Average$54,200$58,710$-4,510
Cost of Living97100-3
Adjusted Pay$55,876$58,710$-2,834

Frequently Asked Questions About Trucking Pay in Idaho

What do truck drivers earn in Idaho?

Idaho CDL-A drivers average $54,200 per year. Boise drivers earn the most at $58,600 as the metro area's rapid growth creates demand for distribution and construction material hauling.

What freight is common in Idaho?

Idaho's top freight includes potatoes (the state produces 30% of US potatoes), dairy products, lumber from the northern forests, and hay/grain from the Snake River Plain agricultural region.

How does Idaho compare to neighboring states for trucking?

Idaho pays less than Washington ($62,400) and Oregon ($58,800) but offers better cost-of-living-adjusted pay than either. The 97% COL index means the $54,200 average goes further than higher wages in costlier states.