Starting and running a trucking company in Delaware
Here's the compliance stack for a trucking company based in Delaware: who runs each requirement and what to handle before the first load.
The Delaware carrier stack at a glance
The compliance picture for a Delaware carrier splits into three layers: the federal baseline every carrier owes, Delaware's own registrations, and the per-mile programs of the states your routes cross. Here's each layer with its real agency.
- IFTA: Delaware DMV
- IRP (apportioned plates): Delaware DMV
- Intrastate program: via Delaware DMV
- Workers' comp: Delaware Office of Workers' Compensation
Interstate: IFTA and IRP for Delaware carriers
Your IFTA base jurisdiction is Delaware: the license and quarterly fuel-tax filings go through Delaware DMV, which issues one license and a set of decals per truck.
Apportioned plates and the cab card come from Delaware DMV under the International Registration Plan, with annual fees split across the states you run by mileage.
Running intrastate only in Delaware
Hauling for pay only within Delaware still requires state registration: start with an intrastate USDOT number, then confirm with Delaware DMV exactly what the state requires before your first in-state load.
Workers' compensation in Delaware
Delaware requires workers' compensation coverage for employees. The authority on specifics is Delaware Office of Workers' Compensation.
Permit states near Delaware
No weight-distance state borders Delaware, but long-haul routes still meet them: Oregon's weight-mile tax, New York's HUT, Kentucky's KYU, New Mexico's weight-distance permit, Connecticut's Highway Use Fee, and California's Clean Truck Check all follow the truck, not the base plate. Register before the route, not after the citation.
The federal baseline (every state)
Whatever the state layer looks like, the federal floor is constant: USDOT number, MC operating authority with a BOC-3 process agent for interstate for-hire work, primary liability insurance on file with the FMCSA, UCR registration, Form 2290 heavy-vehicle use tax, the MCS-150 biennial update, and driver-side items like medical cards and drug-and-alcohol consortium enrollment. The full picture, resolved for your specific operation, lives in CabCommand's compliance roadmap. CabCommand turns this into a living checklist for your fleet: every item named, every deadline alerted, every permit-state crossing flagged at booking.
Frequently asked questions
Where does a Delaware carrier get an IFTA license?
Through Delaware DMV — Delaware is your base jurisdiction, so the license and quarterly returns run through them. Verify current fees and forms with the agency.
Who issues IRP apportioned plates in Delaware?
Delaware DMV. Fees are computed from your per-state mileage and truck weight, so clean trip records set next year's bill.
Does Delaware require workers' comp for drivers?
Coverage is required for employees; Delaware Office of Workers' Compensation is the authority on specifics.
Which drive-through state taxes affect Delaware carriers?
None border Delaware, but long-haul routes meet all six: OR weight-mile, NY HUT, KY KYU, NM weight-distance, CT Highway Use Fee, and CA Clean Truck Check.
Keep Delaware compliance handled for you
CabCommand builds this checklist for your exact operation, tracks every renewal, and warns you when a route needs a permit you don't have yet.
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