What CDL drivers earn in Oklahoma
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics for May 2024, the median annual wage for heavy and tractor-trailer truck drivers (SOC 53-3032) in Oklahoma is approximately $51,480, with a mean of $54,620. That puts Oklahoma roughly -5% versus the national median of $54,320 for the same occupation. The bottom 10% of drivers in Oklahoma earn around $36,120 per year, while the top 10% earn about $74,980.
Why pay varies inside Oklahoma
Inside any single state, CDL pay varies by route type, employer, equipment, and endorsement mix. Over-the-road (OTR) drivers running long-haul routes out of Oklahoma typically earn closer to the top quartile of the state's pay range, because OTR work involves multi-day trips and per-mile pay rates that scale with experience. Local and dedicated drivers running daily routes in Oklahoma often earn closer to the median, but with the trade-off of being home every night. Specialty equipment — tankers, doubles, hazmat loads — almost always commands a premium of $0.04 to $0.10 per mile or 8% to 15% on annual salaries.
Best endorsement combinations for Oklahoma drivers
If your goal is to maximize your earning potential in Oklahoma, the highest-leverage credentials are Hazmat (H) and Tank (N). The combined Hazmat + Tank ("X" endorsement) is the most-requested specialty combination at chemical, fuel, and food-grade tank carriers, and it typically commands a 10% to 20% pay premium over a base Class A CDL. Doubles/Triples (T) is essential for LTL freight networks like FedEx Freight and Old Dominion. School Bus (S) and Passenger (P) open the door to district and transit jobs that pay less hourly but offer better benefits, predictable schedules, and summers off in many Oklahoma districts.
Job outlook for CDL drivers in Oklahoma
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects employment of heavy and tractor-trailer truck drivers to grow about 4% nationally from 2024 to 2034 — about as fast as average for all occupations — with approximately 177,400 annual openings nationwide, the vast majority resulting from retirements and turnover rather than net new positions. Oklahoma's share of those openings is roughly proportional to its current employment of 27,640 drivers, though states with major freight corridors and port complexes tend to see disproportionately strong demand.
Employment is exceptionally cyclical with retail freight volumes, e-commerce growth, energy production, and agricultural cycles. Oklahoma drivers benefit from being inside one of the few occupations with relatively low automation risk over the next decade — autonomous trucking pilots remain limited to specific corridors and supervised operations through 2028 per most industry forecasts.
How to qualify in Oklahoma
If you don't already hold a CDL, our step-by-step How to apply for a CDL in Oklahoma guide walks through the documents, fees, and timeline at the Oklahoma Department of Public Safety. Once you have your OK CLP, drill any of our state-specific practice tests — General Knowledge, Air Brakes, Hazmat, and the rest — to make sure you pass on the first attempt.
Data note
All wage figures on this page are derived from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) program, May 2024 release, for occupation code 53-3032 (Heavy and Tractor-Trailer Truck Drivers). Figures represent gross W-2 wages and do not include per-diem reimbursements, sign-on bonuses, layover pay, or owner-operator settlements (which are reported under separate occupation codes). Where the BLS suppressed exact state-level figures for confidentiality, we use a conservative regional cost-of-living estimate calibrated against the published mean.