Skip to content
IN

Truck Driver Salary in Indiana

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

CDL-A Avg

$58,400

CDL-B Avg

$46,800

Non-CDL Avg

$39,800

Owner-Op Gross

$205,000

Salary Comparison by License Type

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

CDL-A
$58,400
CDL-B
$46,800
Non-CDL
$39,800
Owner-Op (Gross)
$205,000

Cost of Living in Indiana

Cost of Living Index90
Low Cost (80)National Avg (100)High Cost (170)

Indiana's cost of living is 10% below the national average. Your salary stretches further here than in most states.

Cost-of-Living Adjusted Pay

Nominal CDL-A Salary

$58,400

Adjusted Purchasing Power

$64,889

After adjusting for Indiana's cost of living index of 90, a CDL-A salary of $58,400 provides the same purchasing power as $64,889 in an average-cost area. This means your money goes further in Indiana than the raw salary suggests.

Top Paying Cities in Indiana

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

1. Indianapolis
$63,800
2. Fort Wayne
$57,200
3. Evansville
$55,600

Salary Trend in Indiana

Stablevs. national avg: $58,710

Indiana wages are solid and stable, supported by the "Crossroads of America" interstate network. Indianapolis logistics parks and auto manufacturing supply chains keep demand consistent.

Indiana vs National Average

CategoryINNationalDifference
CDL-A Average$58,400$58,710$-310
Cost of Living90100-10
Adjusted Pay$64,889$58,710+$6,179

Frequently Asked Questions About Trucking Pay in Indiana

What do Indiana truck drivers earn?

Indiana CDL-A drivers average $58,400. Adjusted for the state's 90% cost of living, the effective purchasing power is $64,889 — one of the best real-pay states in the Midwest.

Why is Indiana called the Crossroads of America for trucking?

More interstate highways intersect in Indiana than any other state. I-65, I-70, I-69, I-74, and I-80/90 all converge here, making Indianapolis a natural distribution hub with constant freight demand.

What industries drive Indiana trucking?

Automotive manufacturing (Subaru, Honda, Toyota suppliers), pharmaceutical logistics (Eli Lilly in Indianapolis), agricultural products, and e-commerce fulfillment centers from Amazon and FedEx.