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How to Start a Trucking Company in Ohio

Ohio is an excellent state for starting a trucking company β€” home to several major carriers (Nationwide HQ'd here), strong freight corridors (I-70, I-71, I-75, I-80), and reasonable costs. Columbus is a top FedEx hub and Honda/Ford manufacturing drives strong auto parts freight.

Estimated Startup Cost
$7,500-$13,500
Timeline
45-75 days from LLC filing to active MC authority

10-Step Process to Start Your Ohio Trucking Company

  1. 1

    Form your business entity

    Register an LLC or corporation with the Ohio Secretary of State. Most trucking startups form an LLC for liability protection and pass-through taxation. Filing fees vary by state ($50-$300). You'll need a unique business name, registered agent, and EIN from the IRS.

  2. 2

    Get an EIN from the IRS

    Apply for a Federal Employer Identification Number at irs.gov β€” free and instant online. You'll need the EIN for banking, tax filings, FMCSA applications, and insurance.

  3. 3

    Apply for USDOT and MC numbers

    File for interstate operating authority at Unified Registration System (URS) at https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/registration. $300 fee for MC Authority. Processing takes 21 days minimum. Required for any for-hire interstate carrier.

  4. 4

    Designate a BOC-3 process agent

    File BOC-3 through a process agent service (typically $30-$50/year). Process agents accept legal paperwork on your behalf in every state you operate. Required before MC authority becomes active.

  5. 5

    Register for UCR (Unified Carrier Registration)

    Annual UCR fee based on fleet size ($41 for 1-2 trucks in 2026). Register at ucr.gov. Required for interstate carriers before operating.

  6. 6

    Get commercial truck insurance

    Most challenging step for new authorities. Full Coverage specializes in placing new authority carriers β€” we have relationships with carriers that specifically write day-one operations. Typical new authority insurance: $14K-$20K/year for one tractor with $1M liability, $100K cargo, physical damage, and NTL. We handle BMC-91 filing with FMCSA.

  7. 7

    File BMC-91 insurance filing with FMCSA

    Your insurance broker files BMC-91 (proof of $750K BIPD) electronically through FMCSA. This is what activates your MC authority. Without active BMC-91 on file, you cannot legally haul freight.

  8. 8

    File Form 2290 for HVUT

    Federal Heavy Vehicle Use Tax β€” $550 per truck over 55,000 lbs GVWR, filed annually with IRS Form 2290. Must be filed by August 31 for trucks first used in July, or within 30 days of first use.

  9. 9

    Register for IFTA and IRP

    IFTA (International Fuel Tax Agreement) for interstate fuel tax reporting. IRP (International Registration Plan) for apportioned truck registration across multiple states. File through your home state's DMV. Annual renewal required.

  10. 10

    Complete FMCSA New Entrant Safety Audit

    Within 18 months of getting your authority, FMCSA will conduct a safety audit of your operations. You must maintain driver qualification files, drug & alcohol testing records, hours-of-service logs, vehicle maintenance records, and accident records. Failure to pass = authority revocation.

Ohio-Specific Requirements You Need to Know

Ohio Public Utilities Commission regulates intrastate trucking
Ohio BMV handles apportioned registration and IRP
Ohio Turnpike (I-80) uses E-ZPass β€” required for tolling on commercial routes
Ohio workers comp is a state-run program (BWC) β€” not private insurance
Ohio requires separate permit for oversize/overweight via ODOT

Ready to Start Your Ohio Trucking Company?

Insurance is the hardest step for new authorities. Full Coverage specializes in placing new authority carriers β€” we have relationships with carriers that write day-one operations and handle BMC-91 filing within 24 hours of binding.