DOT Blitz Week, officially known as CVSA’s International Roadcheck, is the largest targeted commercial motor vehicle enforcement program in the world. In 2026, it runs from May 12–14, a 72-hour period during which inspectors across the United States, Canada, and Mexico conduct intensive roadside inspections. For shippers, carriers, and brokers, this is a week that demands attention and preparation.
Each year, CVSA designates one driver-focused and one vehicle-focused area for heightened scrutiny. For 2026, inspectors will zero in on ELD tampering and cargo securement. Here’s what you need to know.
What to Expect in 2026
DOT Blitz Week 2026 will take place from May 12–14, and this year’s inspections will center around two critical areas: cargo securement and electronic logging device (ELD) tampering, falsification, or manipulation. These focus areas, as outlined in the International Roadcheck Flyer 2026, highlight critical aspects of vehicle safety and driver compliance that inspectors will be emphasizing during this year’s event.
Focus #1 – ELD Tampering, Falsification & Manipulation (Driver)
On the driver side, inspectors will be scrutinizing Electronic Logging Device (ELD) compliance, specifically looking for signs of tampering, falsification, or manipulation of records of duty status (RODS). In 2025, falsification of record of duty status was the second most-cited driver violation at 58,382 violations, and five of the top 10 driver violations were related to hours of service or ELDs.
What inspectors will be looking for:
- Hidden or unlogged driving time, including “ghost” logs or disconnected device entries
- Unassigned driving miles with no logged driver
- Edits or annotations that conceal hours-of-service (HOS) violations
- Supporting documents (fuel receipts, toll records, GPS) that don’t match ELD data
- Devices on FMCSA’s Revoked Devices list
The consequences of non-compliance are significant. Carriers should ensure all drivers understand federal ELD regulations, exemptions, and proper annotation requirements before May 12.
Focus #2 – Cargo Securement (Vehicle)
On the vehicle side, cargo securement is the 2026 spotlight. Improperly secured loads are a serious safety risk, adversely affecting a vehicle’s maneuverability and causing unsecured loads to fall or become dislodged, resulting in roadway hazards and crashes. In 2025, 18,108 violations were issued because cargo was not secured to prevent leaking, spilling, blowing, or falling, and 16,054 violations were issued for vehicle components or dunnage not being secured.
FMCSA Cargo Securement Rules (49 CFR Part 393) require that:
- Cargo must be firmly immobilized or secured using tiedowns, dunnage, shoring bars, or equivalent systems
- The aggregate working load limit of securement equipment must be at least 50% of the cargo weight
- Loads that appear capable of shifting or falling can result in an immediate out-of-service order
- Special attention applies to open-deck, heavy haul, machinery, and building material freight
This focus area is especially relevant for shippers, as cargo securement isn’t just a carrier responsibility. Shippers play a role in ensuring loads are packaged, staged, and loaded in ways that support proper securement during transit.
What Shippers Can Expect During DOT Blitz Week
Even if your freight moves without incident, DOT Blitz Week creates ripple effects across the supply chain. Here’s what shippers should anticipate:
- Capacity tightening: Some drivers voluntarily stay off the road during the blitz period. Others may be placed out of service due to violations, reducing available truck capacity, particularly on longer lanes where HOS constraints already create pressure.
- Rate volatility: Tighter truck supply with steady demand can push spot rates higher, especially on time-sensitive or high-volume lanes. Shippers with fixed ship/delivery windows may feel this most acutely.
- Potential delays: A thorough Level I inspection takes time. Missed pickup or delivery appointments can roll freight into late-week boards, compounding Thursday/Friday capacity pressure.
- Routing guide pressure: As capacity shifts, contracted carriers may decline loads, pushing shippers deeper into routing guides or onto the spot market.
Proactive planning, early communication with your logistics partners, and realistic lead times will be key to minimizing disruption.
How Carriers Can Prepare
Preparation is the best defense during DOT Blitz Week. Here are four key steps carriers can take before May 12 to ensure their drivers and vehicles are inspection-ready.
- Audit your ELD compliance now. Review all driver RODS for accuracy. Check that ELD devices are on FMCSA’s approved list (and not on the revoked list). Ensure drivers understand how to properly annotate edits and exemptions.
- Train drivers on cargo securement standards. Walk through FMCSA 49 CFR Part 393 requirements with your team. Make sure every driver can verify and demonstrate proper securement before departure.
- Conduct pre-event fleet inspections. Don’t wait for the roadside. Perform thorough vehicle inspections in advance, addressing any mechanical issues, tiedown deficiencies, or dunnage problems before May 12.
- Organize your documentation. Have driver logs, maintenance records, inspection reports, and medical certificates accurate, up-to-date, and accessible. Clear paperwork speeds inspections and demonstrates compliance confidence.
The goal isn’t just to get through DOT Blitz Week. It’s to build habits that protect your drivers, your fleet, and your customers every day of the year.
Ready to Tackle DOT Blitz Week?
Safety and compliance aren’t just a DOT Blitz Week priority. They’re the foundation of a resilient supply chain year-round. CVSA’s mission is to improve commercial motor vehicle safety through guidance, education, and advocacy, and the best logistics partners share that commitment.
Whether you need to review your carrier compliance standing, secure capacity ahead of the blitz, or build a more resilient logistics strategy for the future, working with a trusted logistics partner can make all the difference.
Need assistance getting ready? We’d love to help — contact us today to ensure your operations stay compliant and running smoothly.