Fleet & Equipment Data

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The Fleet & Cargo tab tells you everything you need to know about how many drivers a carrier has, what they drive, and what they haul. These are the numbers that decide how much DOT-physical revenue a single carrier represents.

Fleet Summary #

The top of the Fleet tab shows four headline numbers:
Total Drivers

Combined CDL + non-CDL drivers from MCS-150. This is the number you multiply by your exam price to estimate revenue.

Total Power Units

Trucks, tractors, and buses combined. Indicates the scale of the carrier's fleet.

Utilization Ratio

Drivers ÷ power units. A ratio above 1.2 suggests the carrier is running multiple drivers per truck — a strong DOT-exam signal.

Fleet Size Category

A coded letter (A–I) from FMCSA that classifies the carrier's size band. See Fleet Size Categories in Category 9 for the full table.

Vehicle Breakdown #

Below the summary, the panel breaks fleet equipment into owned versus leased across three vehicle types:
Vehicle TypeOwned FieldLeased FieldWhat It Tells You
TrucksowntrucktrmtruckStraight trucks — box trucks, dump trucks, etc.
TractorsowntracttrmtractSemi-truck cabs that pull trailers. Heavy interstate operations.
TrailersowntrailtrmtrailPulled units. High trailer count with low tractor count = drop-and-hook operation.
Why owned vs. leased matters

A carrier that owns most of its equipment is more likely to be a stable, established business. A carrier with mostly leased equipment is often growing or running a leased-on owner-operator model.

Cargo Types & Special Operations #

Carriers also report what they haul. The Fleet tab surfaces these as badges on the carrier's profile:
HAZMAT

Carrier has hazardous-materials authority. Drivers need additional endorsements — a premium-physical opportunity.

Tanker

Liquid or liquefied-gas hauler. Often higher-paying freight; drivers tend to be experienced.

Passenger

Buses or vans. Drivers fall under the same DOT physical rules and often need certifications every year.

General Freight

The default cargo class. Most carriers without HAZMAT, tanker, or passenger flags fall here.

Carrier Operation Type #

The Operation field tells you whether the carrier crosses state lines — a major factor in DOT physical demand:
CodeOperationWhat It Means
AInterstate (For-Hire, Property)Crosses state lines hauling freight for hire. Federal DOT-physical rules apply.
BInterstate (For-Hire, Passengers)Cross-state passenger transport. Annual physicals common.
CIntrastate OnlyOperates within one state. State rules vary, but many still require DOT physicals.
DPrivate PropertyHauls own goods only. Drivers still need DOT physicals if CDL-required.
XExempt For-HireHauls federally-exempt commodities. Less regulated.

Reading the Fleet for DOT-Exam Opportunity #

Quick rules of thumb

20+ drivers = high exam volume. 10–19 drivers = steady mid-size opportunity. 3–9 drivers = small but worthwhile. Utilization above 1.2 often signals an even larger 1099/owner-operator network that may not show in driver counts.

Updated on April 29, 2026
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