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Carrier Onboarding: Process, SOP, & Scorecard Template

Resources > Carrier Onboarding: Process, SOP, & Scorecard Template
Shippers should vet and train carriers on their role in the shipper’s supply chain. Our guide shows you how to create a carrier onboarding process for carrier compliance and logistics success.
Published: May 5, 2026
Last Modified: May 6, 2026

Key Takeaway:

Carrier onboarding is the process shippers use to vet, approve, and prepare freight carriers to move shipments safely and compliantly. A strong onboarding process verifies operating authority, insurance, safety status, payment setup, and service expectations before the first load moves.  

What is Carrier Onboarding?

Carrier onboarding is a process shippers use to vet, approve, and train carriers to provide freight transportation. Shippers vet carriers or third-party logistics (3PL) companies with a freight broker or on their own with the Safety and Fitness Electronic (SAFER) System, which is a Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) resource.

The FMCSA is an agency of the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) that regulates carrier safety, compliance, and freight transportation. Shippers can use SAFER to verify a carrier has met FMCSA compliance regulations.

The carrier onboarding process typically has two phases:

Infographic depicts the carrier onboarding process in two phases. Step 1: Carrier Vetting and Selection to evaluate multiple carriers that potentially fit a shipper's freight transportation needs and costs. Step 2: Carrier Onboarding to prepare selected carriers with required documents and shipping requests, like mode, equipment, and W-9 form.

Carrier setup usually refers to the documentation package a carrier submits to a shipper for approval, including operating authority, insurance, tax forms, and contact details. 

Carriers are equipped to support a shipper’s supply chain with a shipper’s standard operating procedures (SOPs). An SOP is a step-by-step process for carriers to follow a shipper’s supply chain operations.

SOPs are run with digital software that manages shipping documents and data shared between the shipper and carrier.

A shipper’s SOP can include:

  • Electronic Data Interchange (EDI): An EDI is an automated, digital process to send documents between a carrier and shipper. EDIs exchange shipping documents include invoices, Bill of Lading (BoL), and freight bills.
  • Application Programming Interface (API): An API is a software system that exchanges data and documents in real time between multiple parties, like shippers, carriers, and brokers.

In the next section, we’ll go over why shippers onboard carriers.

Why Do Shippers Onboard Carriers?

Shippers onboard carriers to confirm that a transportation provider is legally authorized, properly insured, operationally capable, and aligned with service expectations before moving freight. This reduces compliance risk, improves execution, and helps build a more reliable carrier network. 

Onboarding a reliable carrier can lead to the following benefits:

  • Improved on-time pickup and delivery performance
  • Reduced compliance and fraud risk
  • Standardized carrier documentation
  • Improved capacity planning across lanes
  • Reduced delays caused by missing or expired records

Effective carrier onboarding reduces avoidable delays, improves compliance control, and makes carrier performance easier to manage over time. 

How Do You Verify A Carrier’s Operating Authority and Safety Status?

You can check a carrier’s operating authority and safety status by verifying their Motor Carrier (MC) number, U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) number, and the FMCSA’s SAFER system. 

An MC number can be six or seven digits and is used to verify a carrier’s operating authority. This number proves a company is operating as a for-hire carrier and is transporting federally regulated commodities.

A USDOT number is six to eight digits and assigned to carriers so their safety performance can be monitored. This includes tracking inspections, crashes, and audits. You can use this number to determine how compliant a carrier is with safety procedures.

FMCSA’s SAFER is a free and public database that provides extensive safety records, inspection histories, and compliance data on various carriers. You can use this resource to further investigate your carrier’s adherence to safety. 

What Documents Are Required for Carrier Onboarding?

The documents required for carrier onboarding include a carrier agreement, Certificate of Insurance (COI), W-9 form, and MC/DOT operating authority. We’ll explain each document in the following sections. 

Carrier Agreement

A carrier agreement is a legal contract between a shipper and a carrier that defines how freight will be moved, paid for, and managed. In the arrangement, shippers agree to tender freight for transport, while the carrier agrees to move freight under specific terms, pricing, and service expectations. 

Carrier agreements usually include:

  • Rates and pricing
  • Service expectations
  • Liability and claims
  • Insurance requirements
  • Payment terms
  • Compliance requirements
  • Operational rules

This document is essential because it provides a formal understanding for you and your carrier to follow. 

COI Requirements

A Certificate of Insurance (COI) is a document from a carrier’s insurance provider that serves as proof of a carrier’s active insurance. Whether it’s carrier liability, freight insurance, shippers should obtain a COI to verify their carrier’s policies.

A COI should state the following information:

  • Insurance company name
  • Insurance coverage details and exclusions
  • Policy number
  • Policy expiration date

Shippers can request a COI from the carrier or ask for their insurance provider’s information to obtain the document.

W-9/Payment Setup

The carrier onboarding process includes payment details for shippers to pay their invoices or carriers to pay approved freight claims, if applicable.

Shippers should request the following payment information:

  • W-9 tax form
  • Direct deposit information (ACH/wire)
  • Invoicing and payment history procedure to log payments

In the next section, we’ll discuss how to keep a scorecard to measure carrier performance.

What Metrics Belong On A Carrier Scorecard?

A carrier scorecard should measure reliability, capacity, service consistency, and equipment fit before approval. Core metrics include on-time pickup, on-time delivery, tender acceptance, transit consistency, capacity availability, and equipment suitability. 

The table we’ve provided will explain these metrics and what to measure in more depth.

Infographic depicts a carrier metric scorecard for shippers and brokers to assess a carrier's freight shipping performance. The metrics include (from top left to bottom left): on-time pickup rate, on-time delivery, transit time consistency, tender acceptance rate, capacity availability, and equipment quality and sustainability.

Some scorecard data may come from internal shipment history rather than public carrier profiles, so shippers often need to collect performance details during qualification and after initial loads. 

What Should A Carrier Onboarding Checklist Include?

A carrier onboarding checklist should include the carrier’s MC or USDOT number, Certificate of Insurance, W-9, contact information, freight requirements, and TMS or EDI setup details. These items support compliance review, payment setup, and shipment execution. We’ve provided a table so you can more easily track this information as you obtain it.

Infographic depicts a carrier onboarding checklist for shippers that includes obtaining: the carrier company name, carrier MC/DOT number, W-9 form, carrier contact information, certificate of insurance (COI), FMCSA safety rating and carrier scorecard, freight shipment details, special handling instructions, and TMS/EDI/ADI setup.

Now that you have carrier vetting process tools, you can select and train the best-fit freight professional to join your team.

How Long Does Carrier Onboarding Take?

If you have systems in place to automate the onboarding process, you’ll be able to finish the process in between a few minutes and a few hours. Standard onboarding processes are typically completed between 24 and 48 hours. However, manual onboarding processes can extend the process for as long as one and two weeks. 

We’ll discuss some of the mistakes that can extend the onboarding process in the following section. 

What Mistakes Slow Down Carrier Onboarding?

Carrier onboarding slows down when documentation is incomplete, workflows are manual, requirements are unclear, or systems are disconnected. Standardized checklists, digital document collection, and early validation checks help reduce delays and improve approval speed. 

We’ve provided a list of the most common mistakes that cause these issues:

  • Relying on manual processes and disconnected systems.
  • Accepting incomplete, incorrect, or expired carrier documentation.
  • Failing to clearly communicate onboarding requirements and expectations.
  • Using overly complex or carrier-unfriendly onboarding workflows.
  • Lacking integration between TMS, compliance, and onboarding tools.
  • Applying inconsistent or insufficient carrier vetting procedures.
  • Allowing inconsistent data formats and missing standardization.
  • Not designing onboarding processes to scale with carrier volume.
  • Overlooking identity verification and fraud prevention early in the process.
  • Assuming all carriers can easily adopt required digital tools.

Shippers can speed up slow carrier onboarding by replacing manual, reactive processes with clear, streamlined workflows supported by technology. This starts by bringing everything into one system (or connected tools) where carriers can submit documents, fill out profiles, and track their status in one place. 

Providing clear requirements, upfront checklists, and automatic checks helps catch missing or incorrect information early. When documents, compliance steps, and contracts are handled digitally and in the right order, onboarding becomes faster and more consistent. 

USA Truckload Shipping: FMCSA-Compliant Freight Experts

Once your onboarding checklist, compliance checks, and scorecard criteria are in place, you can approve carriers faster and reduce avoidable freight risk. Teams that need help with carrier qualification or shipment execution can also work with a freight partner for added support.  

Take a look at our services to find the right one for your shipping needs. Get in touch with our team and call (866)-353-7178 or get expert freight consultation to plan your shipment today.

Sources:

Safety and Fitness Electronic Record (SAFER) System, U.S. Department Transportation

Newsroom, U.S. Department of Transportation

What Is Operating Authority (MC number) and Who Needs It?, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, 2023

About Form W-9, Request for Taxpayer Identification Number and Certification, International Revenue Service

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