DOT compliance is the part of running a trucking company that nobody got into the business to do — but it is the part that can shut you down fastest if you get it wrong. For small carriers without a dedicated compliance officer, the regulatory landscape can feel overwhelming: driver qualification files, vehicle inspections, hours of service rules, drug testing programs, insurance minimums, IFTA filings, and a penalty structure that can turn one bad audit into a five-figure problem.

This guide breaks down every major compliance area that small trucking companies need to manage, explains what the regulations actually require in plain language, and lays out a system for staying compliant without letting it consume your operation.

Important disclaimer: This guide provides general information for educational purposes. Federal and state regulations change, and your specific operation type, cargo, and geography may create additional requirements. Always verify current rules with FMCSA or a qualified transportation attorney for your specific situation.

Driver Qualification (DQ) Files

Every commercial driver you employ must have a complete Driver Qualification file maintained at your principal place of business. This is one of the first things an FMCSA auditor checks, and incomplete DQ files are among the most common violations found during compliance reviews of small carriers.

49 CFR Part 391 — Qualifications of Drivers and Longer Combination Vehicle (LCV) Driver Instructors
A motor carrier must maintain a DQ file for each driver it employs. The file must contain specific documents proving the driver is qualified to operate a commercial motor vehicle. FMCSA Regulation — 49 CFR §391.51

A complete DQ file must contain all of the following:

The most common DQ file failures at small carriers are expired medical certificates and missing annual MVR reviews. Both are calendar-driven tasks that are easy to forget when you are focused on running trucks. Set up alerts 60 and 30 days before each driver’s medical certificate expiration, and schedule annual MVR pulls and driving record reviews on a fixed date each year.

Vehicle Maintenance and Inspection

FMCSA requires carriers to systematically inspect, repair, and maintain all commercial motor vehicles under their control. This is not a suggestion — it is a regulatory mandate with teeth, and vehicle maintenance violations are consistently among the top categories in roadside inspections.

Driver Vehicle Inspection Reports (DVIRs)

49 CFR §396.11 — Driver Vehicle Inspection Report
Every driver must prepare a written report at the end of each driving day on the condition of the vehicle. If defects or deficiencies are found, the report must identify them. The motor carrier must repair any items that would affect safe operation before dispatching the vehicle. FMCSA Regulation — 49 CFR §396.11 and §396.13

DVIRs are daily documents. At the end of each driving day, the driver inspects the vehicle and reports on the condition of specific components: service brakes, parking brake, steering mechanism, lighting devices, tires, horn, windshield wipers, rear vision mirrors, coupling devices, wheels, rims, and emergency equipment. If no defects are found, the driver notes that. If defects are found, the carrier must repair them and certify the repairs before the vehicle goes back into service.

The receiving driver on the next shift must review the previous DVIR and sign it before driving. DVIRs with reported defects must be retained for three months. Many small carriers retain all DVIRs for at least 12 months as a best practice for audit documentation.

Annual Vehicle Inspections

49 CFR §396.17 — Periodic Inspection
Every commercial motor vehicle must pass an annual inspection performed by a qualified inspector. The inspection must cover all items specified in Appendix G to 49 CFR Part 396. The inspection report must be retained for 14 months, and a copy of the report or a decal must be carried on the vehicle. FMCSA Regulation — 49 CFR §396.17 through §396.23

Annual inspections are comprehensive — brakes, suspension, steering, frame, exhaust, fuel system, lighting, tires, wheels, windshield, and coupling devices all get examined. The inspection must be performed by a qualified inspector (either a certified mechanic at a repair facility or a qualified person employed by the carrier). Schedule annual inspections at least 60 days before expiration to allow time for any required repairs.

Systematic Maintenance Program

Beyond daily DVIRs and annual inspections, carriers must maintain a systematic inspection, repair, and maintenance program for each vehicle. This means having a documented schedule of preventive maintenance — oil changes, brake adjustments, tire rotations, fluid checks — and records proving the work was done. During an audit, FMCSA will ask to see your maintenance program documentation and evidence of compliance.

Hours of Service (HOS) Rules

Hours of service regulations limit how long commercial drivers can operate vehicles before they must rest. HOS violations are among the most scrutinized compliance areas because fatigued driving is a leading cause of commercial vehicle accidents.

49 CFR Part 395 — Hours of Service of Drivers
Property-carrying CMV drivers are subject to the following limits: 11-hour driving limit after 10 consecutive hours off duty; 14-hour on-duty window; mandatory 30-minute break after 8 hours of driving; and 60/70-hour weekly limits. FMCSA Regulation — 49 CFR §395.3

The core HOS rules for property-carrying drivers:

All HOS records must be maintained using a registered Electronic Logging Device (ELD) unless the driver qualifies for a specific exemption. ELD data must be available for transfer to law enforcement during roadside inspections and must be retained by the carrier for six months.

Short-haul exception: Drivers who operate within a 150 air-mile radius of their normal work reporting location and return to that location within 14 hours may use timecards instead of ELDs, provided they meet specific conditions under 49 CFR §395.1(e)(1). This exception is valuable for many small local carriers, but the conditions must be met strictly.

Drug and Alcohol Testing

FMCSA requires carriers to implement a drug and alcohol testing program for all drivers who hold a commercial driver’s license and operate commercial motor vehicles. This is not optional, and it applies to carriers of every size — including owner-operators with a single truck.

Required testing categories:

FMCSA Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse
Since January 2020, all carriers must query the FMCSA Clearinghouse before hiring a driver and conduct annual queries for all current drivers. The Clearinghouse is a database of drug and alcohol violations. A driver with an unresolved violation in the Clearinghouse cannot perform safety-sensitive functions. 49 CFR Part 382, Subpart G

Insurance Requirements

FMCSA sets minimum insurance requirements for motor carriers based on the type of freight transported. These are federal minimums — many shippers and brokers require higher coverage, and your actual insurance costs will depend on your safety record, experience, and claims history.

Cargo Type Minimum Liability Coverage
General freight (non-hazmat) $750,000
Oil (petroleum products) $1,000,000
Hazardous materials (general) $1,000,000
Hazmat — certain explosives, poisons, radioactive $5,000,000
Household goods carriers $750,000

Beyond liability minimums, most carriers also need cargo insurance (typically $100,000 minimum, though many brokers require $250,000), physical damage coverage for owned equipment, and bobtail insurance for when the truck is operating without a trailer. General liability and umbrella policies are also standard for most operations.

Insurance lapses are reported to FMCSA and can result in operating authority suspension. Your insurer files a Form BMC-91 or BMC-34 with FMCSA confirming your coverage. If that coverage lapses, FMCSA is notified and your authority can be revoked within 30 days. Keep your insurance payments current and maintain a buffer — an authority suspension means every truck in your fleet stops moving.

Penalties for Non-Compliance

The financial penalties for DOT compliance failures range from annoying to business-threatening. Here are the current penalty ranges for common violations:

Violation Penalty Range
Operating without authority Up to $16,864 per violation
HOS violations (per violation) $1,270–$16,864
ELD non-compliance $1,270–$16,864
Incomplete DQ file (per driver) $1,270–$16,864
Drug/alcohol testing program failure $1,270–$16,864 per violation
Vehicle maintenance violations $1,270–$16,864
Insurance filing violations Up to $16,864 + authority revocation
Clearinghouse query failure $1,270–$16,864 per driver
Imminent hazard out-of-service order Up to $105,000
Pattern of violations (operations shutdown) Complete operations shutdown + penalties

These penalties are per violation, and they stack. A compliance review that uncovers incomplete DQ files for five drivers, a lapsed drug testing program, and HOS documentation gaps can easily produce a penalty assessment exceeding $50,000. For a small carrier, that can be existential.

CSA score impact: Beyond direct fines, compliance violations feed into your Carrier Safety Assessment (CSA) scores. High CSA scores trigger increased roadside inspection rates, make shippers and brokers less willing to work with you, and drive up your insurance premiums. A single bad audit can create compounding costs for years.

Building a Compliance System That Runs Itself

The carriers that stay perpetually compliant without drowning in paperwork treat compliance as a system, not a periodic scramble. Here is how to build that system:

1. Centralize All Documents Digitally

Every DQ file, every inspection record, every maintenance log, every insurance certificate — stored digitally and accessible from anywhere. Paper files in a filing cabinet are one fire, one flood, or one disgruntled employee away from a compliance catastrophe. Digital storage also means you can produce documents instantly during a roadside inspection or when an auditor calls.

2. Build a Compliance Calendar

Every compliance obligation has a deadline. Map them all:

Set alerts at 60 days and 30 days before each deadline. The goal is to never be surprised by an expiration. When you get the 60-day alert, you schedule the action. When you get the 30-day alert, you verify it was done.

3. Automate What You Can

Modern fleet management software can track most compliance deadlines automatically and send alerts without any manual effort. Your ELD system handles HOS recording. Your dispatch system can log DVIRs digitally. Your maintenance tracking can alert you when service intervals are due. The less compliance work that depends on someone remembering to do it, the less compliance work gets missed.

4. Conduct Quarterly Self-Audits

Every 90 days, spend two hours reviewing your own compliance status. Pull every driver’s DQ file and verify completeness. Check that all vehicle inspections are current. Confirm your drug testing consortium is conducting random tests at the required rate. Review your CSA scores in the FMCSA Safety Measurement System. Fix anything that is out of compliance immediately — do not wait for an auditor to find it.

5. Train Your Drivers on Their Responsibilities

Drivers are your front line for several compliance areas: pre-trip inspections, DVIRs, HOS compliance, and roadside inspection interactions. A driver who understands what an inspector looks for, how to present ELD data, and how to complete a proper DVIR is an asset. A driver who does not understand these things is a liability that generates violations you have to pay for.

Stay Ahead, Not Behind

DOT compliance failures do not usually happen because fleet owners do not care — they happen because compliance got deprioritized when operations got busy. A load needed covering, a driver called in sick, a truck broke down, and nobody remembered to pull the MVR that was due last week or renew the medical card that expired yesterday.

The solution is not working harder or hiring a compliance officer you cannot afford. The solution is building systems — calendars, alerts, digital document storage, and regular self-audits — that keep compliance moving forward even when your attention is on the hundred other things that demand it every day.

Start with the highest-risk areas: DQ files and HOS compliance are what auditors examine first and where penalties stack fastest. Get those completely current and systematized. Then work through vehicle maintenance records, drug testing documentation, and insurance filings. A carrier that is genuinely compliant operates with less liability exposure, better insurance rates, and more credibility with shippers and brokers who increasingly vet carriers before tendering freight.