FMCSA Commercial Truck Insurance Minimums in California (2026)
How much insurance trucks must carry — and why it matters for your injury claim
Short answer: A for-hire truck hauling ordinary freight across state lines must carry at least $750,000 in liability insurance under federal law. Trucks carrying hazardous materials must carry $1 million or $5 million. California intrastate carriers must insure under the state Motor Carrier Permit program based on weight and cargo. These limits dwarf the $30,000 minimum for an ordinary California driver — which is the central reason commercial truck cases can produce far larger recoveries for catastrophically injured victims.
Federal FMCSA minimum insurance requirements
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) sets minimum levels of financial responsibility for commercial motor vehicles operating in interstate commerce. These minimums are codified at 49 C.F.R. § 387.9 and depend on what the truck is hauling:
- $750,000 — For-hire and private carriers of non-hazardous property in vehicles with a gross vehicle weight rating of 10,001 lbs or more. This is the floor for the vast majority of general-freight semi-trucks and big rigs.
- $1,000,000 — Carriers of certain oil and listed hazardous substances or materials in smaller quantities.
- $5,000,000 — Carriers of large quantities of hazardous materials, explosives, poison gas, or radioactive materials.
- $1,500,000 — For-hire carriers of passengers in vehicles designed for 15 or fewer passengers.
- $5,000,000 — For-hire carriers of passengers in vehicles designed for 16 or more passengers.
These are minimums. Many national carriers and well-insured fleets carry $1 million primary policies plus multimillion-dollar excess or umbrella coverage layered on top. Identifying the full insurance "tower" available is one of the first jobs in a serious truck case.
California intrastate carriers and the Motor Carrier Permit program
A truck that operates only within California (intrastate) is governed by California's own rules rather than the interstate federal table. California motor carriers must hold a valid Motor Carrier Permit (MCP) and maintain proof of liability insurance on file, under the Motor Carrier Permit program administered through the DMV and enforced by the California Highway Patrol (see Veh. Code § 34620 et seq.). Required limits scale with the vehicle's weight and the type of cargo (for example, household-goods movers and hazardous-materials haulers face higher requirements). Because the exact figure depends on the specific carrier and load, confirming a defendant's actual coverage requires obtaining the carrier's permit and insurance filings.
How this compares to an ordinary California driver
The contrast is stark. Effective January 1, 2025, California's minimum auto liability insurance for a private passenger vehicle rose to $30,000 per person / $60,000 per accident / $15,000 property damage (often written "30/60/15"). A single commercial truck policy can therefore be 25 times larger or more than the coverage on the car that hit you. For a victim with a spinal cord injury, traumatic brain injury, or wrongful-death claim, the difference between a $30,000 policy and a $750,000–$5,000,000 policy is often the difference between a token recovery and one that actually covers a lifetime of medical care.
Why commercial truck cases are "high value"
Higher insurance limits are only part of the story. Truck cases tend to be larger and more complex than ordinary car-accident claims for several reasons:
- More severe injuries. A loaded tractor-trailer can weigh 80,000 lbs — roughly 20 times a typical passenger car. Crashes routinely cause catastrophic, permanent injuries.
- Multiple liable parties. Beyond the driver, you may have claims against the motor carrier (under respondeat superior and for negligent hiring, training, or retention), the company that owned or leased the trailer, the freight broker or shipper, a maintenance contractor, and the manufacturer of a defective component — each potentially carrying its own insurance.
- A web of federal safety rules. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations govern driver hours of service (49 C.F.R. Part 395), driver qualification (Part 391), drug and alcohol testing (Part 382), and vehicle inspection and maintenance (Part 396). A documented violation of these rules can be powerful evidence of negligence.
- Time-sensitive electronic evidence. Modern trucks generate data that can prove fault — but it can disappear quickly.
Critical evidence to preserve immediately
Much of the most valuable evidence in a truck case is controlled by the trucking company and can be lawfully overwritten or destroyed on a routine schedule. A prompt spoliation (evidence preservation) letter should be sent to the carrier to lock it down. Key items include:
- Electronic Logging Device (ELD) data — shows hours of service and whether the driver was fatigued or over-hours.
- Engine Control Module ("black box") data — speed, braking, and throttle in the seconds before impact.
- Driver qualification file — license, training, prior violations, and medical certification.
- Drug and alcohol testing records following the collision.
- Maintenance, repair, and inspection records for the tractor and trailer.
- The bill of lading and dispatch records — route, deadlines, and load weight.
- Dashcam and forward-facing camera footage.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the minimum insurance a commercial truck must carry in California?
A for-hire truck carrying non-hazardous freight in interstate commerce must carry at least $750,000 in liability coverage under federal law (49 C.F.R. § 387.9). Trucks hauling certain hazardous materials must carry $1 million or $5 million. California intrastate carriers must maintain coverage under the California Motor Carrier Permit program, with minimums tied to vehicle weight and cargo. By contrast, the minimum for an ordinary California passenger car is just $30,000 per person (effective January 1, 2025).
Why do commercial truck accident cases often have higher settlements?
Two reasons. First, large trucks cause more severe injuries, so damages are larger. Second, federal law forces trucking companies to carry far higher insurance limits than ordinary drivers ($750,000 to $5 million versus $30,000), and there are often multiple insured parties — the driver, the motor carrier, the trailer owner, the broker, and a maintenance contractor — each with its own policy.
Who can be held liable in a California commercial truck accident?
Liability can extend well beyond the driver. Potentially responsible parties include the trucking company (motor carrier) under respondeat superior, the company that owned or leased the trailer, the freight broker or shipper, a negligent maintenance or repair contractor, and the manufacturer of a defective part. Identifying every liable party is critical because each may carry separate insurance.
What evidence should be preserved after a truck accident?
Critical evidence includes the truck's ELD hours-of-service data, the engine control module ("black box"), driver qualification and drug-testing files, maintenance and inspection records, the bill of lading, and dashcam footage. Much of this can be lawfully destroyed on a routine retention schedule, so an attorney should send a spoliation letter to the carrier as quickly as possible.
This article is general legal information about California and federal law, not legal advice for any specific case. Insurance requirements and statutes change; figures stated here reflect rules in effect in 2026. For advice about your situation, speak with an attorney.
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