You just got your DOT number. Congratulations. Now the FMCSA is watching your every move for the next 18 months.
Your USDOT number comes with an automatic entry into the New Entrant Safety Audit program, which requires you to pass a compliance audit within your first 12 months of operations.
This isn’t optional. And if you fail, it can put you out of business.
Here’s How the Timeline Works
The FMCSA monitors New Entrants for a period of 18 months, with most audits occurring within the first three to six months of obtaining your DOT number.
You’ll receive written notification from the FMCSA with a date and time. Then one of three things happens:
On-Site Audit: An auditor shows up at your office Off-Site Audit: You meet them at a pre-arranged location Online Audit: You submit documents through the FMCSA portal
Whichever format you get, you need to be ready.
The Critical Violations That End Businesses
A New Entrant will AUTOMATICALLY FAIL the Safety Audit for violations related to having no alcohol and/or drug testing program, no random drug and/or drug testing program, or using a driver who refused a required alcohol or drug test.
One automatic failure violation ends the audit and revokes your authority.
Other violations that cause immediate failure include using a driver without a valid CDL, using a disqualified driver, using a driver with a revoked, suspended, or cancelled CDL, using a medically unqualified driver, or operating without required insurance.
These aren’t gray areas. You either have these controls in place or you don’t.
What Happens If You Fail
If you fail, you have 60 days (45 days if you’re a passenger/hazmat carrier) to submit a corrective action plan. If corrective action is not submitted or accepted by the FMCSA within this window, your New Entrant Registration will be revoked for a minimum of 30 days.
That means you’re out of business. Temporarily. But that 30-day window is brutal when you’re trying to build a business.
The DQ File Is Your Foundation
The new entrant audit focuses heavily on driver qualification files. You must maintain driver qualification files on every driver (including yourself if you’re an owner-operator) that contain pre-employment drug and alcohol testing results as well as evidence of random drug and alcohol testing.
Your DQ files aren’t just compliance documents. They’re your pass/fail mechanism for the entire audit.
Get your DQ files right from Day 1.
Get Your New Entrant Compliance Checklist →
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ComplyDQ: Complete driver qualification file management built for new entrants. Pass your safety audit with confidence.
Sources:
- FMCSA New Entrant Safety Audit: How to Prepare and Pass (2024)
- Foley Services: An Overview of the New Entrant Program & Safety Audit (2024)
- FMCSA New Entrant Safety Assurance Program Official Documentation
- Bobtail: How To Pass The New Entrant Safety Audit

