Most new trucking companies that fail the FMCSA audit fail for preventable reasons.
The main ways audits are failed are: not submitting the required documentation and ignoring the regulations (operating as though the regulations are optional).
If you understand what you need to do and actually do it, you’ll pass. But understanding the requirements? That’s harder than it sounds.
The Documentation Requirement Nobody Expects
When the FMCSA calls for your audit, they don’t ask nicely. They ask for everything at once.
You need to provide:
- A complete list of all drivers (including yourself) with DOB, hire date, license number, license state
- Driver Qualification Files for every driver
- Drug and Alcohol Testing Clearinghouse proof and query documentation
- Proof of drug and alcohol testing program membership
- Medical certificates and MVRs
- Pre-employment and random drug testing results
- Vehicle maintenance records and inspection reports
- One month of ELD records for at least one driver
- Written policies and procedures
If any of this is missing, disorganized, or incomplete, you’ll have violations.
The DQ File Complexity Most New Entrants Miss
Your driver qualification file must include a completed and signed application for employment that includes the driver’s complete work history for the past three years, plus any company they’ve driven a CMV for over the last 10 years.
But that’s just the beginning. You must also provide a document listing all inquiries made, including inquiries to previous employers, licensed states for MVR, and acceptance of drug screening for employment.
Add to that:
- Valid CDL copies
- Medical certificates (current)
- Motor Vehicle Records (current)
- Pre-employment drug test results
- Random drug testing records
- Training documentation
- Vehicle inspection results
Most new entrants don’t even know half of these go in the DQ file. They gather documents haphazardly and hope for the best.
That’s not a strategy. That’s a recipe for failure.
What Happens After Failure
You don’t get a second chance immediately. If you fail to pass the audit and don’t submit acceptable corrective action within the required timeframe, your New Entrant Registration will be revoked for a minimum of 30 days.
Then you have to reapply. Start the entire 18-month process over.
The Prevention Strategy
Get organized from Day 1. Set up digital driver qualification files with every required document. Don’t wait until the audit notification arrives to start gathering papers.
New entrants that pass audits cleanly did one thing differently: They prepared before the audit call came.
Don’t learn compliance the hard way.
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Sources:
- True North Technology Services: FMCSA New Entrant Safety Audit: How to Prepare and Pass
- True North Technology Services: How to prepare for the New Entrant Safety Audit
- Foley Services: An Overview of the New Entrant Program & Safety Audit (2024)

