BY STATE — ALASKA
Getting your DOT authority in Alaska
After your federal authority is granted, your truck registration and any state-level requirements run through Alaska’s own agencies. Below is the full checklist plus Alaska’s specific filings and official links.
Your new-carrier checklist (registered in Alaska)
This is the standard for-hire interstate stack, with the IRP, IFTA, and weight-distance permit links resolved to Alaska. Items marked “Vertical Identity” are handled by us when you enroll.
Activate your authority
File your BOC-3 (process agent)
A registered process agent must file this. We resell a partner that handles it.
When:Before authority is granted; must stay on file.
Source: 49 CFR §366 · reviewed 2026-06-14
File your insurance (BMC-91X)
Your insurer files this electronically. $750k for most for-hire property; higher for passenger/hazmat.
When:Within 20 days of FMCSA Register publication.
Source: 49 CFR §387 · reviewed 2026-06-14
Authority goes ACTIVE
You may not operate until your authority shows ACTIVE. (Not a flat "21 days.")
When:~3–4 weeks (10-day protest + 20-day filing); longer if vetted.
Source: FMCSA registration · reviewed 2026-06-14
Register for UCR
UCR's site makes DIY easy — do it yourself there, or we'll handle it. Fees = official UCR schedule.
When:Annual; before interstate operation.
Source: 49 U.S.C. §14504a · reviewed 2026-06-14
Get compliant to operate
Join a drug & alcohol consortium (C/TPA)
Owner-operators MUST be in a consortium for random testing — you can't self-administer. We are your C/TPA.
When:Before any driver performs a safety-sensitive function.
Source: 49 CFR §382 · reviewed 2026-06-14
Pass a pre-employment drug test
The test must be passed — not just taken — before driving. We order it.
When:Negative result REQUIRED before the first dispatch.
Source: 49 CFR §382.301 · reviewed 2026-06-14
Register + query the FMCSA Clearinghouse
Login.gov steps are yours; we run the queries as your TPA.
When:Full query pre-employment; limited query annually.
Source: Clearinghouse final rule · reviewed 2026-06-14
Build your Driver Qualification File
Even a solo owner-operator needs a DQF on themselves. We manage it.
When:Before driving; MVR within 30 days of hire + annually.
Source: 49 CFR §391.51 · reviewed 2026-06-14
DOT medical card (physical)
Required to hold a CDL for interstate non-excepted driving. We perform the physical.
When:Valid up to 24 months — can be shorter. Renew before expiry.
Source: 49 CFR §391.41–.49 + §383.71 · reviewed 2026-06-14
Written drug & alcohol policy
A written policy is required. We provide one per DOT mode.
When:Provided to drivers before they drive.
Source: 49 CFR §382.601 · reviewed 2026-06-14
Supervisor reasonable-suspicion training
60 min drugs + 60 min alcohol for anyone making reasonable-suspicion calls. We train them.
When:Before the DER/supervisor supervises drivers.
Source: 49 CFR §382.603 · reviewed 2026-06-14
Register your truck
File IRS Form 2290 (HVUT)
Vehicles ≥55,000 lb. E-file returns a stamped Schedule 1 in minutes — do it yourself at IRS.gov.
When:Before plating (Schedule 1 required to register).
Source: IRS Form 2290 · reviewed 2026-06-14
Register IRP apportioned plates
Multi-state operation. File through your base state — link below for each state you picked. Apportioned plates are about the VEHICLE running interstate, not about holding MC authority — private and exempt-commodity carriers (USDOT-only, no MC) register IRP too.
When:After authority is active; needs your base state.
Where to do it: AK
Source: IRP / base-state · reviewed 2026-06-14
Pass your New Entrant Audit
Pass your New Entrant Safety Audit
The #1 automatic failure is having no drug & alcohol program. Stay enrolled and you pass.
When:Within 12 months of starting operations.
Source: 49 CFR §385 subpart D · reviewed 2026-06-14
Core regulatory sources: 49 CFR §382 · 49 CFR §385 subpart D · last reviewed 2026-06-14
Alaska state specifics
IRP (apportioned plates)
Alaska Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV) — Commercial Vehicle Registration. NOTE: Alaska does NOT participate in IRP/apportioned registration; carriers operating across jurisdictions use dual commercial registration or a Commercial Trip Permit (TRT) instead.
IFTA (fuel-tax license)
Not available — Alaska is NOT an IFTA member jurisdiction (IFTA excludes Alaska, Hawaii, Yukon, and Northwest Territories), so no Alaska IFTA license is issued. A carrier based in Alaska cannot get an IFTA license; fuel-tax matters fall under the Alaska Department of Revenue, Tax Division.
Intrastate operating authority
Not a separate state certificate
No separate state operating authority is required beyond a USDOT number; Alaska deregulated intrastate for-hire trucking and the Regulatory Commission of Alaska does not issue motor-carrier freight operating authority — USDOT number only (commercial vehicle registration and permits handled via Alaska DMV / DOT&PF MS-CVC).
Weight-distance / mileage tax
Alaska has no weight-distance tax
State details sourced from official Alaska .gov agencies · last reviewed 2026-06-14
We handle the federal compliance stack
Enroll in our consortium and we take care of your drug & alcohol program, Clearinghouse queries, and driver qualification files — while you handle the Alaska registrations above.
Enroll in the consortiumThis is general guidance, not legal advice. Verify requirements with FMCSA and your state DOT. See all states →