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Carrier vetting by state

Freight Carrier Vetting in North Carolina

North Carolina is home to 49,413 FMCSA-registered motor carriers, the #10 most of any U.S. state. Before you tender a load to one, check its federal record — authority, insurance, safety, and fraud signals — and keep a dated vetting record.

49,413
Registered carriers in North Carolina
2.4% of all U.S. carriers
31,008
Authorized for-hire carriers
The ones that haul freight for pay
#10
National rank by carrier count
Of 50 states + DC

Where North Carolina carriers are based

The cities with the most registered carriers in North Carolina.

  • Charlotte4,725
  • Raleigh2,168
  • Greensboro1,292
  • Fayetteville984
  • Durham838
  • Monroe677

How to vet a North Carolina carrier before you book

  1. Confirm active operating authority

    A North Carolina carrier must hold active FMCSA authority for the freight it hauls. Watch for broker-only authority posing as a carrier — the classic double-brokering setup.

  2. Verify insurance on file

    Check that liability and (where relevant) cargo coverage are on file and meet the required minimums — not lapsed or below the requirement.

  3. Read the safety record

    Out-of-service rates versus the national average, crash history, and inspections tell you how the carrier actually operates — not just that it's registered.

  4. Screen for fraud signals

    A VoIP/burner phone, a mail-drop or residential address, or an identity reused across multiple carriers are classic ghost- and chameleon-carrier tells a single lookup misses.

Check a North Carolina carrier now

Free, no signup — enter any carrier’s MC or DOT number to see its full federal record and get a dated vetting record (PDF).

Just the number works — with or without the MC/DOT prefix, and spaces are fine. Tip: prefix an MC number with “MC” (e.g. MC123456) so it isn't read as a DOT number.

Demo:— click to see a sample result + PDF

Why vetting is a legal issue now

In Montgomery v. Caribe (U.S. Supreme Court, 2026), the Court held that freight brokers can be sued for negligently selecting a carrier — in North Carolina and nationwide. Documenting that you checked a carrier, and when, builds your defensible vetting record.

Related

Carrier counts are aggregate figures from the public FMCSA Motor Carrier Census, by the carrier’s physical-address state. CarrierClear is an independent service, not affiliated with or endorsed by FMCSA or the U.S. Department of Transportation. This page is general information, not legal advice, and not a certification of any carrier. Verify any specific carrier independently before doing business.