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Compliance10 min read2026-03-03

FMCSA Compliance Checklist for Cross-Border Carriers

Step-by-step FMCSA compliance guide for carriers operating between the US and Mexico. DOT requirements, HOS rules, and IFTA reporting.

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Cantarell OS Team

Published 2026-03-03

1FMCSA Basics for Cross-Border Operations

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) regulates all commercial motor vehicles in the United States. For cross-border carriers operating between Mexico and the US, compliance involves DOT registration, SAFER system enrollment, hours-of-service (HOS) tracking via ELDs, IFTA fuel tax reporting, and hazmat endorsements for fuel transporters.

2Hours of Service (HOS) Requirements

US HOS rules for property-carrying drivers: 11-hour driving limit after 10 consecutive hours off duty, 14-hour on-duty window, 30-minute break required after 8 hours of driving, 60/70-hour weekly limit. All HOS must be recorded on FMCSA-approved Electronic Logging Devices (ELDs).

3IFTA Fuel Tax Reporting

The International Fuel Tax Agreement (IFTA) requires quarterly reporting of fuel purchased and miles driven in each jurisdiction. Cross-border carriers must track fuel purchases by state/province and calculate net tax owed or credits due. Cantarell OS automates IFTA calculations by integrating GPS mileage with fuel card transaction data.

4Automate Cross-Border Compliance

Cantarell OS provides automated HOS tracking, IFTA fuel tax calculation, DOT number verification, and FMCSA SAFER integration — all from a single platform designed for binational operations.

FMCSA compliancecross-border truckingDOT requirementsHOS rulesIFTA reporting

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FMCSA Compliance Checklist for Cross-Border Carriers | Cantarell OS Blog