Transportation

Salario de Camionero en Washington (2026)

El salario promedio de un Camionero en Washington es de $62,000/año. Después de impuestos, tu sueldo neto estimado es de $51,997/año ($4,333/mes).✓ Sin impuesto estatal

Desglose del Sueldo Neto

CategoríaCantidad
Sueldo Neto Anual
$51,997
Sueldo Neto Mensual
$4,333
Sueldo Neto Quincenal
$2,000
Sueldo Neto por Hora

basado en 2,080 hrs/año

$25/hr
Impuesto Federal
$5,260
Impuesto Estatal
$0
Impuestos FICA
$4,743
Tasa Efectiva de Impuesto

impuestos totales ÷ salario bruto

16.13%
Estimaciones solamente — no es asesoría fiscal. · Aviso legal completo →

¿Quieres modelar 401(k), HSA, o aportes antes de impuestos contra tu salario completo? Abrir la calculadora de salario

¿Trabajas horas extra? La deducción OBBBA 2025 puede ahorrarte hasta $12,500 en impuesto federal. Abrir la calculadora de horas extra

¿Trabajo 1099 o proyectos paralelos? El impuesto SE agrega 15.3% encima. Ver la calculadora de freelancer

¿Recibes bono de fin de año, firma o retención? Ver la calculadora de bonos

Términos clave:···

Rangos de Salario de Camionero en Washington

Nivel inicial (0–3 años)

$48,000

/año

Ver desglose fiscal →

Nivel medio (3–7 años)

$60,000

/año

Ver desglose fiscal →

Nivel senior (7+ años)

$100,000

/año

Ver desglose fiscal →

No todas las Camioneros ganan lo mismo — ni de cerca

Washington trucking centers on Puget Sound port logistics and I-5 north-south corridor freight. The Northwest Seaport Alliance (Seattle / Tacoma combined) is the 4th-largest US container port complex, supporting a deep port drayage market. Long-haul OTR drivers running I-5 (Mexico → Canada) and I-90 (Pacific Northwest → Midwest) anchor regional employment. Washington's no state income tax is a meaningful advantage for owner-operators clearing six-figure net revenue.

Port Drayage Driver (Seattle/Tacoma)

$68,000–$105,000

Specialty · 4th-largest US container port · steady demand

Owner-Operator (Long-Haul I-5/I-90)

$85,000–$185,000+

No-state-tax advantage compounds for high earners

OTR Long-Haul Driver

$60,000–$95,000

Pacific Northwest base · multi-state regional or transcontinental

Tanker Driver (Petroleum)

$75,000–$120,000

Cherry Point refinery · Olympic Pipeline · HazMat endorsement

Refrigerated (Reefer) Driver

$58,000–$88,000

Ag freight (apples, berries, dairy) · Yakima Valley → coastal CA

Local Delivery Driver

$50,000–$74,000

Daily home time · Seattle metro / Spokane / Tri-Cities

Flatbed Driver

$62,000–$95,000

Construction materials, Boeing aerospace components

Logging Truck Driver

$55,000–$82,000

WA specialty · Pacific NW timber industry

New CDL Driver (<1 year)

$46,000–$62,000

Entry-level pay; experience-based progression

Trainer / Senior OTR (10+ years)

$72,000–$108,000

Mentor and trainer roles at major fleets

Vale la pena saber: Washington imposes a 7% capital gains tax (on long-term gains above $270K/year) but no income tax on wages. For owner-operators structured as S-corps with significant retained earnings or equipment sales, the cap gains tax can apply. For typical employee drivers and IC drivers paid on revenue, there's effectively no state-level tax burden. The Olympic Pipeline and Cherry Point refinery support specialty tanker work; the Northwest Seaport Alliance container ports support drayage; Boeing's Renton and Everett facilities support flatbed and aerospace component hauling.

Washington trucking — port logistics, no-tax advantage, and Pacific NW operations

4th

Northwest Seaport Alliance is the 4th-largest US container port complex

0%

Washington state income tax on wages — meaningful for high-earning drivers

$185k+

top owner-operator net revenue with established business + no state tax

The Northwest Seaport Alliance (Seattle / Tacoma) handles approximately 3.7 million TEU annually, making it the 4th-largest US container port complex behind LA / Long Beach, NY / NJ, and Savannah. Drayage drivers move containers from port to nearby distribution centers — the work is local (typically same-day, home most nights), pays meaningfully better than long-haul, and supports stable career paths.

I-5 and I-90 are the dominant freight corridors. I-5 carries traffic from California ports through to Vancouver BC; I-90 connects Seattle to Spokane and onward to the Midwest. Washington-based OTR drivers typically run regional Pacific Northwest, transcontinental I-90, or Pacific corridor I-5 routes. Major freight hubs at Tacoma, Seattle (Pier 91 / SODO), Spokane, and Pasco anchor the network.

Washington's 0% state income tax on wages is genuinely meaningful for high-earning truck drivers. An owner-operator clearing $150,000 net pays roughly $9,300 less in state tax than the equivalent operator in California. Combined with lower-than-coastal cost of living in Tacoma, Spokane, Tri-Cities, and Pacific NW exurbs, the take-home math is favorable.

Pacific Northwest weather is the operational variable: I-90 mountain passes (Snoqualmie, Stevens, White) can close in winter conditions, requiring chains and careful planning. I-5 is generally year-round operable but rain volume during October-March is intense. Most successful Pacific NW drivers run with weather-aware planning and seasonal route adjustments.

Washington for truck drivers — no-tax advantage, port specialty, Pacific NW lifestyle

Washington's port drivers concentrate around Tacoma (Northwest Seaport Alliance terminal proximity) and Seattle (SODO/Harbor Island warehouse cluster). The lifestyle is daily-home with intense urban port driving — appointment scheduling, container availability, and tight delivery windows. Local delivery drivers spread across Puget Sound suburbs for daily routes.

Long-haul drivers based in Washington benefit from the no-state-tax advantage, the country's strongest Pacific corridor freight demand, and access to mountain and coastal scenery during off-time. The trade-off is winter weather and the operational complexity of mountain pass driving. Successful Pacific NW long-haul drivers often run dedicated regional or transcontinental routes that minimize unpredictable weather exposure.

Owner-operators benefit substantially from Washington's no-income-tax structure. Net revenue $120,000–$185,000+ for established operators is achievable, with the autonomy and tax efficiency of running a business in a no-tax state. Equipment costs are comparable to other Pacific states.

How Washington taxes work for truck drivers (and how to keep more)

Washington's 0% state income tax on wages is genuinely meaningful — and the benefit scales with income. An employee driver at $65K saves ~$3,000-$4,000/year vs neighboring OR (which has 9.9% top, kicking in early). A $130K owner-operator saves $7,000-$13,000/year vs OR. Compounded over a 30-year career at 7% returns, the WA-vs-OR gap is genuinely $400,000-$700,000+ in lifetime wealth difference. WA neighbors a high-tax state (OR) but is itself in the no-state-income-tax category alongside TX, FL, NV, TN, SD, WY, AK.

The catch is the 7% capital gains tax (above $270K of long-term capital gains in a single year). For typical employee drivers, this is irrelevant — wages aren't capital gains. For owner-operators selling appreciated equipment in a single year, OR for drivers with substantial holdings from a tech-employer spouse, the 7% can apply. Most truck drivers won't trigger this, but worth knowing if you have an unusual liquidity event year.

The Vancouver WA + Portland OR arbitrage is the underrated WA driver structure. WA residents working remotely or for WA-based employers pay 0% state tax. WA residents working in Portland OR pay OR's progressive income tax (no reciprocity — OR taxes those wages). BUT WA residents shopping in OR pay OR's 0% sales tax (one of only 5 no-sales-tax states). Vancouver WA + Portland OR cross-border shopping for big-ticket purchases is a real cost-of-living advantage. For drivers with WA-based employers (which is most Seattle/Tacoma trucking), the entire arrangement is structural win.

  • Max your ($24,500 in 2026) — pre-tax for federal. At a $90K driver income, every $1,000 deferred saves ~$220-$300 federally. With WA's 0% state tax, the entire deferral reduces only federal taxable — no state offset to consider. Strong simplicity.
  • Per-diem deduction (long-haul drivers): IRS $69/day federal per-diem reduces federal taxable income. 200 nights = $13,800 deduction. With WA's 0% state tax, no state offset — full per-diem benefit is federal-only.
  • election for owner-ops at $100K+ net revenue: saves 7.65% self-employment tax on profit above reasonable salary. WA's Business and Occupation (B&O) tax (~$0.471% on gross revenue for most trucking business categories) applies to owner-ops, but it's modest and predictable.
  • Property tax: WA's Initiative 747 caps annual tax growth at 1% (excluding new construction, voter-approved levies). Long-time homeowners pay dramatically less than new buyers. Don't 'trade up' without modeling property tax reset. WA averages ~0.85% effective.
  • WA Capital Gains Tax (7% above $270K /year): plan equipment sales across years if possible. Selling appreciated truck/trailer equipment in chunks below $270K/year avoids the 7% — meaningful for owner-ops upgrading equipment in late career.
  • Vancouver WA + Portland OR arbitrage: live in Vancouver WA + work for WA-based employer = 0% state income tax + 0% OR sales tax for shopping in Portland. The combination is among the best US cost-of-living-vs-tax structures, especially for drivers who cross the river for Costco/Home Depot/etc.

Three Washington metros for truck drivers — what each one looks like

WA trucking is dominated by Puget Sound port operations (Seattle/Tacoma) but Eastern WA (Spokane) and Vancouver WA (Portland-area arbitrage) are distinct sub-markets.

Tacoma / Seattle (Northwest Seaport Alliance)

Drayage: $26–$36/hr · Local: $24–$32/hr · OTR: $0.55–$0.72/mile

Northwest Seaport Alliance (Tacoma + Seattle combined) is the 4th-largest US container port complex. Drayage drivers move containers from port (Tacoma side has more capacity) to nearby distribution. Strong daily-home work. Pacific corridor I-5 long-haul (Mexican border to Canadian border) anchors regional demand.

Tacoma metro housing is meaningfully cheaper than Seattle proper — Lakewood, Spanaway, Puyallup offer driveway access at $375-$525K for 3BR. Seattle south-end (Kent, Auburn, Burien) is the warehouse corridor. Pacific NW winter rain (October-March) is intense; mountain pass weather complicates I-90 operations.

Spokane / Eastern WA (I-90 corridor)

OTR: $0.50–$0.65/mile · Local: $20–$28/hr

Eastern WA hub at I-90 corridor + I-395. Significantly cheaper than Puget Sound. Strong regional distribution + I-90 transcontinental freight. Tri-Cities (Pasco, Kennewick, Richland) supports Hanford-area logistics + Columbia River barge interchange + ag freight from Yakima Valley.

Spokane Valley / Liberty Lake offer driveway-friendly housing at $285-$385K for 3BR with substantial yards. Tri-Cities is the cheapest WA option (~$250-$350K for 3BR). Trade-off: smaller local job market means most Eastern WA drivers run regional or OTR routes.

Vancouver WA (Portland OR cross-river arbitrage)

WA-based: $25–$32/hr · OR-commute: $26–$34/hr (OR tax applies)

Vancouver WA + Portland OR cross-river is one of the better US driver arbitrage zones. WA residents working for WA-based employers pay 0% state tax. WA residents shopping in OR pay 0% sales tax. The arbitrage is meaningful for drivers based in WA with regional Pacific Northwest routes that don't require OR-based employment.

Vancouver WA 3BR homes at $385-$535K with driveway access. Battle Ground / Brush Prairie (Clark Co exurbs) cheaper. The risk: if you work for an OR-based employer (Portland trucking companies), OR taxes those wages — the arbitrage works best for WA-based or remote-WA work.

The career arc — from new CDL to senior trainer to owner-operator

Washington driving careers start at $46,000-$60,000 as a new CDL-A driver — slightly elevated entry-level reflecting Pacific NW cost of living. Major WA-based + national fleets — Saia (PNW operations), Schneider, Werner, JB Hunt, Knight-Swift, FedEx Freight, Boeing supply chain hauling — recruit through WA CDL programs. The first 12 months focus on safety record + Puget Sound vs Eastern WA path selection. Mountain pass driving on I-90 (Snoqualmie, Stevens) is genuinely demanding for new drivers — most fleets pair new entrants with experienced trainers for first PNW winter.

Years 2-5 are the experience-progression band — pay rises to $60,000-$98,000. Northwest Seaport Alliance drayage at Tacoma/Seattle pays specialty premium starting ~$26-$36/hr. UPS/FedEx Seattle Teamsters routes progress meaningfully. HazMat-endorsed petroleum work at Cherry Point refinery (Whatcom Co) and Olympic Pipeline pays solid premium. Boeing supply chain hauling (Renton / Everett / Auburn) supports specialty flatbed work for aerospace components.

Years 5-10 are the owner-operator decision point. Senior WA employee drivers earn $74K-$118K (especially at FedEx Freight, UPS, Teamsters fleets, dedicated routes). Owner-operators with established Puget Sound shipper relationships clear $100K-$185K+ net revenue. WA's 0% state income tax + Pacific corridor freight density + low B&O tax create exceptional owner-op economics. Many career WA drivers stay in WA through retirement specifically because of the no-state-tax structure compounding for accumulated and IRA balances.

Late career (15+ years): senior trainers and dedicated lane operators. Established Puget Sound owner-operators downsize to predictable dedicated lanes — Pacific corridor I-5 (Mexican border to Vancouver BC), regional PNW circuits, or transcontinental I-90 east. WA retirement math is genuinely excellent — 0% state income tax on wages OR retirement income, no estate tax above $2.193M (2026 exemption), 7% capital gains tax only above $270K/year (so most retirees pay $0). Many career drivers retire in WA. The only retirement consideration: WA's 7% capital gains tax can apply to large equipment sales or stock-sale years, so plan transitions carefully.

Where Washington truck drivers actually live

Washington truck drivers cluster in working-class communities with truck and trailer parking access. Tacoma metro for port drivers (Lakewood, Spanaway, Puyallup). Seattle metro drivers in Kent / Auburn / Burien (warehouse corridor). I-90 long-haul drivers along the I-90 corridor (North Bend, Issaquah for Seattle access; Spokane Valley for Eastern WA).

Tacoma / Lakewood / Puyallup

Port adjacent · NW Seaport Alliance · working-class communities · driveway access

Kent / Auburn / Burien

Seattle warehouse corridor · I-5 freight access · trucker-friendly

Spokane / Spokane Valley

Eastern WA hub · I-90 corridor · much lower COL than Puget Sound

Tri-Cities (Pasco/Kennewick)

Hanford logistics · ag freight · most affordable WA driver market

North Bend / Issaquah

I-90 corridor access · Cascade foothills · driveway-friendly

Vancouver WA

I-5 corridor · Portland-area access · no-tax + OR sales-tax-free shopping

Truck parking and yard space matter. Many Pacific NW drivers live in semi-rural exurbs (Roy, Eatonville, Yelm, Spanaway south of Tacoma) with driveway space and lower property cost. The Tri-Cities area (Pasco, Kennewick, Richland) has emerged as an Eastern WA driver hub thanks to Hanford-area logistics.

¿Es la decisión correcta?

Washington for truck drivers — no-tax advantage, port specialty, Pacific NW operations

A tu favor

  • +0% state income tax — meaningful at owner-operator and high-earning driver income
  • +4th-largest US container port complex (Tacoma / Seattle drayage market)
  • +I-5 and I-90 corridors support strong freight volume
  • +Pacific NW lifestyle access (mountains, coast, outdoor recreation)
  • +Tri-Cities and Spokane offer affordable Eastern WA bases
  • +Boeing aerospace + Hanford logistics + agriculture create freight diversity

Vale la pena saber antes de firmar

  • Mountain pass weather complications (Snoqualmie, Stevens) for I-90 drivers
  • Puget Sound housing costs significant — many drivers commute from exurbs
  • I-5 congestion through Seattle is a daily operational reality
  • Limited interstate freight density vs Texas or California
  • 7% capital gains tax above $270K/year applies to S-corp gains realizations

Mercado Laboral en Washington

Amazon, Microsoft, and Boeing headquarters drive high tech and aerospace demand.

Perspectivas de crecimiento: 4% growth through 2032 (about as fast as average)

Puestos relacionados:

Camionero de Larga DistanciaConductor de Reparto LocalOperador Propietario

Costo de Vida en Washington

Seattle area is expensive; eastern WA is affordable. Median 1BR rent: $1,800–$2,800 in Seattle.

💰 Sueldo neto mensual: $4,333

🏠 Renta típica: $2,300/mo

📊 Después de renta: $2,033/mo

Calcula Tu Sueldo Neto Exacto

Agrega contribuciones al 401(k), HSA, dependientes y más para ver tu sueldo neto personalizado.

Abrir Calculadora Completa

Frequently Asked Questions

Find answers to common questions about your taxes and our calculator.

Comparar dos estados

Compara el impuesto sobre la renta, el salario neto y la carga fiscal total entre cualquier par de estados de EE.UU.

Estado 1

Estado 2

Salario de Camionero en Otros Estados

Más sobre Washington