Compliance & FMCSA

FMCSA Renews USDOT Marking Rules, What 50-Foot Legibility Means

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration renewed marking requirements June 1, 2026. The rule applies to 938,861 carriers. Black marker and peeling decals still fail the 50-foot standard.

Commercial truck door displaying USDOT number and carrier name in high-contrast lettering, readable from 50 feet in daylight
Photo: Lav Ulv from Viby J, Denmark (via source)

What does 49 CFR 390.21 require on the side of a truck?

Every self-propelled commercial motor vehicle operating in interstate commerce must display two things on both sides: the legal name or a single trade name of the motor carrier operating the vehicle, and the USDOT number issued to that carrier, shown as "USDOT" followed by the number. Both must be readable from 50 feet away in daylight. Both must contrast sharply with the background. Both must stay legible, which means faded, peeling, dirt-obscured, or damaged markings fail even if they were applied correctly at the start.

On June 1, 2026, FMCSA published an information collection notice tied to its Commercial Motor Vehicle Marking Requirements, OMB Control Number 2126-0054. The filing is not a new rule. Under the Paperwork Reduction Act, federal agencies must periodically renew approval for the paperwork and recordkeeping burdens they impose. This filing is FMCSA continuing to document the burden associated with the existing marking regulations. The public comment window runs to July 1, 2026.

The marking rules are not changing. FMCSA is renewing the administrative approval to keep requiring them. The filing lays out exactly how broadly these rules reach and how the agency thinks about them.

How many carriers does the USDOT marking rule cover?

The marking requirements apply to an estimated 938,861 total respondents. That includes roughly 900,043 freight-carrying motor carriers, about 20,878 intrastate hazardous materials carriers, around 16,409 passenger-carrying carriers, and 1,531 intermodal equipment providers. FMCSA estimates the task at about 26 minutes per response, broken down as 12 minutes to affix the USDOT number and 14 minutes to affix the carrier's name. The total annual burden across the industry runs into the millions of hours. This is a requirement that touches essentially every carrier operating in interstate commerce.

The governing regulation is 49 CFR 390.21. The rule is performance-based on the method. FMCSA does not require a specific application method. You can paint it, use a decal, or use a removable device. That flexibility is real, and it is where the handwritten-marker and homemade-sign approaches come from. But the flexibility is about method, not about quality. A marking that does not meet the contrast, legibility, and distance standards fails regardless of how it was applied. A USDOT number scrawled in marker that you cannot cleanly read from 50 feet does not comply just because the rule allows removable methods. The standard the marking has to meet does not get more lenient because you chose the cheapest way to apply it.

Why does FMCSA care about truck markings?

The USDOT number is the key identifier that ties a vehicle to a carrier across FMCSA's entire registration and safety system. It is how the agency, the National Transportation Safety Board, and the states identify a motor carrier and correctly assign responsibility for regulatory violations during inspections, investigations, and after crashes. It is the number states use in the Performance and Registration Information Systems Management program, the cooperative federal and state system that ties safety performance to a carrier's ability to register and operate vehicles. When that number is missing, wrong, unreadable, or does not match the carrier actually operating the truck, the entire chain of accountability breaks down.

There is also a fraud dimension that has made marking compliance more consequential in the current environment. As FMCSA has cracked down on chameleon carriers (operations that shut down under one identity and reopen under another to escape a safety record) and as freight fraud and carrier identity theft have grown, the markings on a truck have become part of how legitimacy gets verified. A truck whose visible identification does not cleanly match the carrier and authority behind it is exactly the kind of discrepancy that draws attention in an enforcement climate built around verifying that carriers are who they claim to be. The mismatched, improvised, or sloppy marking that used to be a minor annoyance now sits against a backdrop where identity verification is a priority.

What marking failures show up most often at roadside inspections?

The handwritten or marker-applied number is the classic. It usually happens because a new decal has not arrived, a number changed, or a truck was put into service in a hurry. It frequently fails the contrast and legibility standard, and even when it is readable up close, it rarely holds up to the 50-foot daylight standard.

The peeling or partial decal is another. A marking that was compliant when applied degrades over time, and the rule requires it to stay legible, not just to have started that way. A number with letters flaking off, or obscured by road grime and never cleaned, is a violation that the carrier created through neglect rather than through any original error.

The missing or mismatched name is common among carriers who display the USDOT number but not the legal or single trade name, or who display a name that does not match the carrier actually operating the vehicle. This is a particular problem in leasing arrangements where the operating carrier and the equipment owner are different entities. The rule requires the name of the carrier operating the vehicle, and getting that relationship right matters in any lease or interchange situation.

The runaway magnetic sign rounds out the list. Magnetic placards are legal and convenient, but they fall off, they curl, and they get left behind. A truck operating without the required marking because the magnet is sitting in a parking lot two states back is operating in violation regardless of the carrier's intent.

What does a compliant USDOT marking look like?

Apply your USDOT number and your legal or single trade name to both sides of every power unit, using a method that produces clean, high-contrast, durable lettering readable from 50 feet in daylight. A professionally produced decal or quality lettering costs very little against the value of avoiding a citation, and it removes the entire category of marker-and-paint-pen problems permanently.

If you use magnetic signs, inspect them as part of your daily walkaround. Confirm they are present, flat, clean, and legible. Carry a backup so a lost placard never puts a truck out of compliance mid-trip.

Verify that the name displayed is the legal name or a single registered trade name of the carrier actually operating the vehicle, and that the USDOT number matches that carrier. In any lease or owner-operator arrangement, confirm whose name and number belong on the truck under the specific operating authority in use. That is a frequent point of confusion and a frequent violation.

The rule requires the marking to remain legible for the life of its use, which means a number that was perfect when the truck went into service can drift out of compliance through fading, damage, or dirt. A quick check during the daily walkaround keeps a slow degradation from becoming a citation.

What small fleets need to do this week

Walk every power unit in your fleet. Stand 50 feet away in daylight. If you cannot cleanly read the USDOT number and the carrier name on both sides of the truck, the marking fails. Replace it before the next trip. If you are using magnetic signs, inspect them daily and carry a backup. If you lease equipment or run under another carrier's authority, verify whose name and number belong on the truck under the operating authority you are using. The June 1 filing does not change any of this. It is a routine renewal of a requirement that has been in place for years and that applies to nearly every carrier on the road. But it is a clean reminder that what goes on the side of a truck is a federal compliance matter governed by a specific standard, not a place to improvise.

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