Hauling placarded hazardous materials stacks four federal requirements on top of ordinary motor-carrier registration: the driver’s hazmat endorsement, the company’s annual PHMSA registration, an FMCSA safety permit for the highest-risk loads, and placarding on the vehicle itself. Each layer has its own agency, its own fee, and its own renewal clock — and missing any one of them is enforceable at every scale and port of entry. Here is the full stack, with the 2026 numbers verified against the issuing agencies.
Layer 1: The CDL Hazmat (H) Endorsement
Any driver operating a vehicle that requires hazmat placards must hold the H endorsement on their CDL under 49 CFR §383.93. Getting it is a three-step sequence:
- Complete ELDT theory training.First-time H applicants must finish Entry-Level Driver Training theory instruction from a provider listed in FMCSA’s Training Provider Registry before taking the state knowledge test. The rule applies to anyone who did not already hold the endorsement before February 7, 2022.
- Pass the TSA security threat assessment. Fingerprints plus a background check through TSA’s HME program. The fee is $85.25 for new and renewing applicants (effective January 1, 2025), or $41.00 at the reduced rate for drivers with a valid TWIC. The assessment is valid five years, and TSA recommends enrolling at least 60 days before you need the determination — processing can exceed 45 days.
- Pass the state hazmat knowledge test.The H endorsement requires a knowledge test administered by your state licensing agency; renewal cycles follow your state’s CDL schedule, with new fingerprints at each five-year TSA renewal.
Layer 2: PHMSA Hazmat Registration
The company-level registration under 49 CFR §107.601 applies to anyone who offers or transports: a highway route-controlled quantity of Class 7 radioactive material; more than 25 kg (55 lbs) of Division 1.1, 1.2, or 1.3 explosives; more than one liter per package of an extremely toxic-by-inhalation material (hazard zone A); hazmat in bulk packaging of 3,500+ gallons or 468+ cubic feet; 5,000+ lbs gross of one placarded class in non-bulk packaging; or — the catch-all that covers most carriers — any quantity of hazardous material that requires placarding. Federal, state, tribal agencies and certain farm operations are excepted.
The registration year runs July 1 through June 30. For 2026–2027, the fee is $275 for small businesses and not-for-profits and $2,600 for everyone else, including the $25 processing fee; multi-year options run $525/$5,175 (two years) and $775/$7,750 (three years), per the PHMSA registration fee table. Two operational changes land with the 2026–2027 year: PHMSA no longer accepts paper registration forms or check payments — everything is electronic — and partial refunds are no longer issued. Early registration for 2026–2027 opened June 1, 2026.
Two compliance details get missed constantly: every truck hauling registrable quantities must carry proof of the current registration (a copy of the certificate or a document bearing the registration number identified as the “U.S. DOT Hazmat Reg. No.”), and copies of the registration statement must be kept at the principal place of business for three years.
Layer 3: The FMCSA Hazardous Materials Safety Permit
A smaller set of carriers also needs the Hazardous Materials Safety Permit (HMSP) under 49 CFR §385.403. The permit covers the highest-risk loads: highway route-controlled quantities of Class 7 radioactive material; more than 25 kg of Division 1.1–1.3 explosives (or placard-required amounts of Division 1.5); toxic-by-inhalation materials in quantities tiered by hazard zone; and compressed or refrigerated liquefied methane or LNG (85%+ methane) in bulk packaging of 3,500+ gallons. FMCSA publishes the full list in its HMSP materials FAQ.
Carriers apply through Form MCS-150B, and FMCSA only issues the permit to carriers with a satisfactory safety rating. The relationship between the two federal programs runs one direction: every carrier required to hold an HMSP must also have a PHMSA registration, but most PHMSA registrants — ordinary placarded freight — never need the HMSP.
Layer 4: Placarding
Placarding rules live in 49 CFR Part 172, Subpart F. The structure: Table 1 materials (Divisions 1.1–1.3 explosives, poison gas, dangerous-when-wet, certain organic peroxides, toxic-by-inhalation materials, and Radioactive Yellow III) placard at anyquantity. Table 2 materials — the bulk of the hazard classes — placard when the aggregate gross weight on the vehicle reaches 1,001 lbs or more. Any quantity in bulk packaging placards regardless, except Division 6.2 and Class 9. Because “a quantity that requires placarding” is also the PHMSA registration trigger, the placard determination and the registration obligation are effectively the same threshold for most for-hire carriers.
What Stacks on Top: State Programs
PHMSA is explicit that federal registration does not replace state hazmat registration or permitting programs — several states run their own, the same way the weight-distance states stack mileage taxes on top of IFTA. A hazmat carrier still owes every generally applicable state credential covered in the state trucking permits overview, files IFTA quarterly returns like any other interstate fleet, and — for oversized tanks or equipment — pulls OS/OW permits on the same terms as general freight. Routing adds one more wrinkle: certain hazmat classes are restricted from specific tunnels, bridges, and urban corridors, and several states require hazmat route plans for the highest-risk classes.
The Compliance Sequence for a New Hazmat Carrier
In practice the order is: drivers first (ELDT theory, TSA assessment, knowledge test — budget 60+ days for TSA), then the company’s PHMSA registration (online, certificate printable as soon as payment verifies), then the HMSP application if the freight profile requires it, then placards, shipping papers, emergency-response information, and the security plan and training required for registrable quantities under 49 CFR 172.704. Skipping a layer does not void the others — it just means the first roadside inspection finds the gap.