The Auditor Walked Into Your Client’s Office at 9 a.m. What Does the Next Two Hours Look Like for You?

Written by Aliana G
May 18, 2026

On-site audits now represent more than 8 in 10 FMCSA investigations. Here’s exactly what auditors are looking for.

What the data says:

  • In 2024, more than 8 in 10 FMCSA audits were conducted on-site — for the 4th consecutive year of increase.
  • On-site audits uncover twice as many acute violations as off-site reviews, because auditors can interview staff, inspect vehicles, and review physical records.
  • 55% of audits in 2024 included acute or critical violations — those that directly affect a carrier’s safety rating.

Source: FMCSA 2024 Audits Year in Review; FMCSA Motor Carrier Management Information System (MCMIS).

Most compliance audits come with some advance notice — typically a week to a month — but that’s not a reason to relax. Auditors know what a complete file looks like. They’ve done this hundreds of times. And in some cases, particularly following a crash investigation or serious complaint, they show up with no warning at all. That’s exactly why your clients hired a compliance service provider: so that every file is ready before anyone ever asks for it.

An auditor walks in. They want to see driver qualification files. They have a checklist rooted in 49 CFR 391.51. They’ve done this hundreds of times. They know what a complete file looks like, and they know what a gap looks like.

Here’s what they’re checking, in order: employment application, MVR (current and from date of hire), Safety Performance History, medical certificate, road test certificate or CDL copy, drug and alcohol test results, and the Clearinghouse query. For each driver. Every document has a required frequency. Every gap is a potential violation.

For a compliance service provider with organized, current digital files across every account, the next two hours look like this: you (or your client)pull up the system, you provide the auditor what they’ve asked for, answer a few questions, and walk them out.

For a compliance service provider whose clients are running on folders and spreadsheets, the next two hours look different. Open the filing cabinet. Look for the right folder. Find the CDL. Look for the medical certificate. Check the date — expired three months ago. That’s a violation. Look for the MVR. The auditor writes something down.

The audit takes a whole lot longer, and the longer it takes can easily add additional red flags. What’s different is what the auditor finds — and whose phone rings after.

ComplyDQ keeps every driver file across every client account complete, current, and ready. You know before any auditor ever walks in which files are clean and which need attention — because the system tells you proactively.

When the auditor shows up at your client’s door, you’re ready. Not scrambling. 

Book a discovery call to see what audit-ready looks like across every account.

Sources & References

FMCSA 2024 Audits Year in Review — On-site audit rate; acute/critical violation rates
FMCSA Driver Qualification File Checklist (official) — What auditors are checking per 49 CFR 391.51
49 CFR 391.51 — General requirements for driver qualification files — Authoritative list of all required DQ file documents

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