Intrastate vs Interstate Trucking Insurance

Trucking insurance requirements depend heavily on whether you operate intrastate, interstate, or both. Many new carriers misunderstand the difference, which leads to incorrect filings, rejected applications, and delays in activating their authority.

This guide explains the difference between intrastate and interstate trucking insurance, what each requires, and how to stay compliant in every state you operate.

What Is Intrastate Trucking?

Intrastate trucking means you operate within a single state and do not cross state lines.

Examples:

  • Local deliveries within one state
  • Hauling freight from one city to another inside the same state
  • Operating under state‑only authority

Insurance Requirements for Intrastate Carriers

Each state sets its own minimum liability limits. Common requirements include:

  • $300,000 for light commercial vehicles
  • $750,000 for general freight
  • $1,000,000+ for hazardous materials
  • Cargo insurance (required in some states)

State Filings Required

Most states require:

  • Form E — Proof of liability insurance
  • Form H — Proof of cargo insurance (if required)

Your insurance company submits these filings directly to the state.

What Is Interstate Trucking?

Interstate trucking means you:

  • Cross state lines
  • Haul freight between states
  • Haul freight that originated or will end in another state
  • Operate under FMCSA authority

Insurance Requirements for Interstate Carriers

FMCSA requires:

  • $750,000 minimum liability
  • $1,000,000 for most operations
  • $5,000,000 for certain hazmat
  • MCS‑90 endorsement
  • BMC‑91X filing

These requirements apply even if you only cross a state line occasionally.

Key Differences Between Intrastate and Interstate Insurance

1. Who Regulates You

  • Intrastate: State DOT
  • Interstate: FMCSA

2. Required Filings

  • Intrastate: Form E, Form H
  • Interstate: BMC‑91X, MCS‑90, BOC‑3

3. Minimum Liability Limits

  • Intrastate: Varies by state
  • Interstate: Federal minimums

4. Authority Activation

  • Intrastate: State approval
  • Interstate: FMCSA approval

Can You Operate Both Intrastate and Interstate?

Yes — many carriers do.

If you operate both:

  • You must meet FMCSA requirements
  • You may also need state filings
  • Your insurance policy must reflect both operation types

Your agent must list your operation as:

  • Interstate
  • Intrastate
  • Or Both

Incorrect operation type is a common cause of filing delays.

Why the Distinction Matters

Misclassifying your operation can lead to:

  • Rejected filings
  • Delayed authority activation
  • Fines
  • Insurance cancellations
  • Compliance violations

FMCSA and state regulators take operation type seriously.

How to Choose the Right Operation Type

Choose intrastate if:

  • You never cross state lines
  • Your freight never enters interstate commerce

Choose interstate if:

  • You cross state lines
  • Your freight originates or ends in another state
  • You haul brokered loads (most are interstate commerce)

When in doubt, choose interstate — it covers both.

Final Thoughts

Understanding the difference between intrastate and interstate trucking insurance is essential for staying compliant and avoiding delays. Whether you operate within one state or across the country, choosing the correct operation type ensures your filings, insurance, and authority are all aligned.

More From FleetGuard USA

Intrastate vs Interstate Trucking Insurance https://fleetguardusa.com/intrastate-vs-interstate-trucking-insurance

How Form E and Form H Filings Work https://fleetguardusa.com/how-form-e-and-form-h-filings-work

FMCSA vs State Insurance Requirements https://fleetguardusa.com/fmcsa-vs-state-insurance-requirements

Common Compliance Mistakes Truckers Make https://fleetguardusa.com/common-compliance-mistakes-truckers-make

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