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Carrier Vetting Process: FMCSA, Insurance, and Safety Checks

Resources > Carrier Vetting Process: FMCSA, Insurance, and Safety Checks
Use this carrier vetting checklist to evaluate a carrier’s safety record, vehicle inspection history, and compliance with regulations set by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA).
Published: May 4, 2026
Last Modified: May 4, 2026
Author: Joe Weaver

The carrier vetting process is the step-by-step review a shipper uses to verify a carrier’s operating authority, insurance, safety record, identity, and compliance with regulations from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) and U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT). Shippers who vet carriers with a predetermined checklist of safety and compliance-related questions will find a reliable logistics service provider.

What Is Carrier Vetting?

Carrier vetting is the process of evaluating a carrier’s compliance with USDOT and FMCSA regulations, their insurance coverage for carrier liability, and the carrier’s reputation for safety and on-time deliveries.

For instance, a shipper vetting a carrier should ask questions like:

  • Can you provide your Motor Carrier (MC) number as issued by the FMCSA?
  • What is the status of your operating authority?
  • Do you have designated BOC-3 process agents in the states where you move freight?
  • How often will I receive shipping updates?
  • What is your process for handling freight delivery issues that occur after hours?

Carriers should provide their USDOT number to shippers during the vetting process. The USDOT number can be referenced on the department’s website to check a carrier’s safety rating.

Inquiring about a carrier’s FMCSA status first will save time in the vetting process, since failure to comply with FMCSA regulations should be an immediate red flag that indicates the carrier is not to be trusted with a shipper’s cargo.

What Is the Carrier Vetting Process?

The carrier vetting process is the step-by-step review a shipper uses to confirm that a motor carrier meets legal, insurance, safety, and operational standards before freight is awarded.

A typical carrier vetting process includes the following steps:

  1. Verify MC and USDOT numbers: Confirm the carrier’s MC and USDOT numbers match its legal business identity and registration records.
  2. Confirm operating authority status: Check that the carrier has active authority to transport interstate freight for hire.
  3. Check BOC-3 and insurance filings: Make sure required federal filings are in place before moving forward with approval.
  4. Review the certificate of insurance: Inspect the COI for current dates, matching names, and adequate coverage details.
  5. Evaluate safety and inspection signals: Review inspection history, maintenance compliance, and signs of repeated violations.
  6. Review BASICs and enforcement history: Look for unresolved serious violations, elevated safety categories, or recent enforcement activity.
  7. Confirm service and communication procedures: Ask how the carrier handles updates, delays, after-hours issues, and delivery exceptions.
  8. Check for identity and fraud signals: Compare names, phone numbers, email domains, insurance records, and authority details for consistency.
  9. Use a scorecard to approve, seek more information, or reject: Apply the same decision standards to every carrier so approval is consistent and defensible.

This process requires attention to detail, which means you’ll need to complete each step as carefully as possible. 

What FMCSA Checks Matter In the Carrier Vetting Process

The FMCSA is the government entity responsible for regulating interstate freight movement by commercial motor vehicles (CMV). Carriers must comply with the rules and regulations the FMCSA sets in order to gain and maintain operating authority. 

FMCSA outlines three common situations in which operating authority may not be required:

  • Carriers who only transport their own cargo
  • Carriers who exclusively haul cargo that is not regulated at the federal level
  • Carriers who only operate in commercial zones designated by the federal government

Otherwise, if a carrier does not meet these FMCSA compliance basics, it cannot transport interstate freight. 

You can compare freight brokers and asset-based carriers to determine if your freight shipping requirements require more options than a single carrier can offer.

How Do You Verify A Carrier’s Operating Authority?

Carrier authority status is an indicator of whether FMCSA has authorized the carrier to transport freight owned by other individuals or businesses across state lines. When carriers apply for operating authority, FMCSA issues an MC Number to the applicant, but this is not sufficient to begin moving freight between states.

The FMCSA requires the following forms to be submitted after they issue the MC number:

  • Proof of insurance from the insurer of the carrier
  • Form BOC-3 from a designated process agent in each state the carrier intends to operate

The carrier must then wait to receive certification of operating authority before conducting interstate freight transportation.

FMCSA Inspections and Violation Signals

FMCSA requires carriers to have a qualified inspector examine their commercial motor vehicles every twelve months under 49 CFR subsection 396.17. This requirement applies to the power unit itself and any trailers used in tandem with the unit for freight delivery purposes.

Common violations that preclude a (CMV) from passing inspection include the following:

  • Absence of operable lamps
  • Non-functional turn signals
  • Malfunctioning brake components
  • Absent or insufficient warning devices

The carrier must include proof of a successful inspection with all inspected vehicles. A carrier who can’t or won’t provide proof of inspection for their CMV(s) is likely to operate in violation of FMCSA regulations.

What Insurance Should You Verify During Carrier Vetting?

As mentioned before, carriers must provide proof of insurance to FMCSA when applying for operating authority. Carriers who can’t prove they have the insurance required for operating authority are not legally permitted to haul interstate freight. 

Specifically, FMCSA requires proof of liability insurance. This is not the same as cargo insurance. 

Auto Liability vs Cargo Coverage

Liability insurance is a type of coverage FMCSA requires carriers to prove they have to gain an operating authority license. Requirements for liability insurance are found in 49 CFR 387.303.

A CMV with a gross vehicle weight of over 10,000 lbs must carry $750,000 worth of liability insurance to cover property damage, personal injury, and damage to or loss of freight

Liability insurance contrasts with cargo coverage because carrier liability covers the three previously mentioned occurrences, while cargo coverage applies to the freight itself. 

An image containing the following text on a green and blue background:

Carrier liability limits the shipper’s remuneration for freight damage

Cargo insurance can cover a greater percentage of lost freight value

A shipper vetting a carrier can request a copy of the carrier’s certificate of insurance (COI) for inspection during the vetting process.

COI Red Flags

Red flags on insurance certificates indicate that the carrier’s coverage is insufficient or non-existent. A shipper can look for the following potential red flags when reviewing a prospective carrier’s COI:

  • Expired effective policy date
  • Mismatched names between carrier and insurance holder

While vetting a carrier’s liability insurance, request a freshly printed certificate with you or your company’s name as the requestor. Don’t accept an older copy of the certificate as it may contain out-of-date information.

Safety and Performance Signals

Shippers can use a carrier’s USDOT number to find out how the carrier ranks compared to others in terms of safety and performance on FMCSA’s website. FMCSA uses the Behavior Analysis and Safety Improvement Categories (BASICs), part of its Safety Measurement System (SMS), to determine a carrier’s compliance with FMCSA regulations

FMCSA does this by evaluating data from the following:

  • Roadside inspections
  • Accidents and crashes
  • Compliance history

Shippers can look for high-priority green flags in a carrier’s BASIC history during the vetting process:

  • No BASICs above intervention thresholds
  • No unresolved acute or critical violations
  • Stable or improving safety trends over time
  • No recent warning letters, investigations, or enforcement activity
  • No pattern of multiple elevated BASICs

In practical terms, a shipper reviewing a carrier’s USDOT/FMCSA profile should feel more confident when the carrier’s record shows low BASIC exposure, no unresolved serious violations, and no recent signs of enforcement attention.

Quick Scorecard

Use this score card during the vetting process to make a decision about whether you should approve a carrier, request more information, or avoid doing business with them.

A table titled "Carrier Vetting Scorecard" Containing criteria for evaluating a carrier and whether the responses provided by the carrier can be considered a green flag, something that requires the importer to ask more questions, or a red flag. The information presented reads as follows:

FMCSA Operating Authority
Active authority, valid MC/USDOT info, no registration inconsistencies
Authority appears active, but details are incomplete or need verification
Authority inactive, suspended, revoked, or unclear
BOC-3 Required Filing
Confirms required filings are in place
Carrier says filings are active, but cannot immediately verify
Inconsistent, or evasive answers about required filings
Insurance Verification
New-printed COI with current dates, matching legal names, and sufficient coverage
Provided COI contains minor inconsistencies
COI is expired or contains mismatched names, or carrier refuses to provide one at all
Vehicle Inspection and Compliance
Carrier can show current inspection compliance
Carrier only provides general assurances with insufficient documentation
Vague response, no proof of inspections
FMCSA Safety Profile & BASIC Signals
No BASICs above intervention thresholds
Some concerns that could be alleviated with more context
Multiple elevated BASICs infractions
Service Reliability and Customer Communication
Clearly defined update process with an after-hours contact plan
Inconsistent or vague service process
Unclear or non-existent escalation process, non-specific answers about tracking shipments
Fraud and Identity Controls 
Company identity is consistent across multiple documents
Minor details that appear to require clarification
Mismatched business details across multiple documents

Now that you have a scorecard to evaluate your carriers, here’s when you should approve, seek more information, or reject a carrier based on your findings:

  • Approve: No red flags and all required documents verified.
  • Seek More Information: One or two missing items, minor discrepancies, or unclear safety context. 
  • Reject: Inactive authority, expired insurance, mismatched identity, or serious unresolved safety concerns.

A shipper should never rely strictly on price while vetting a carrier. It’s not uncommon for dubious carriers to advertise lower prices than their fully-compliant competitors. 

Partner With USA Truckload Shipping’s Vetted Carriers

Our rigorous vetting process is in place to ensure that your freight shipments are only hauled by FMCSA and USDOT-compliant carriers. Give us a call at (866) 353-7178 or fill out a contact form online to find out more about our freight brokerage and third-party logistics services.

Sources:

Regulations, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, 2024

Unlocking Success: The Key Elements of Carrier Vetting and Managing Liability, Transportation Intermediaries Association, Johnson, Andrew, 2024

Get Operating Authority (Docket Number), Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, 2026

Newsroom, U.S. Department of Transportation, 

Instructions for Form OP-1, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, 2024

Title 49, Subtitle B, Chapter III, Subchapter B, Part 396, Code of Federal Regulations, 2026

Common Violations, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration

Title 49, Subtitle B, Chapter III, Subchapter B, Part 387, Subpart C, Code of Federal Regulations, 2026

Certificates of Insurance - What They Don’t Tell You!, Ford Insurance Agency, 2023

Compliance Manual for eFOTM Redevelopment, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, 2021

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