Quick checklist
- Keep a register for crashes that meet the FMCSR accident definition.
- Check whether the event involved injury, fatality, a vehicle towed from the scene, or certain hazardous materials release details.
- Record date, location, driver name, number of injuries or fatalities, and hazardous materials release details when applicable.
- Save copies of accident reports required by state or other agencies.
- Link each crash to follow-up actions.
Why this matters
An accident register gives the auditor one place to review crash history and related documents. It also helps the carrier see whether follow-up actions were actually completed.
What to prepare
| Area | Records to gather |
|---|---|
| Threshold check |
|
| Register fields |
|
| Supporting file |
|
Common gaps
- A tow-away crash is discussed in email but never entered in the register.
- The register omits injury or fatality counts.
- Post-accident testing records are filed separately with no cross-reference.
- Corrective actions are not documented.
Before / During / After audit
Before
- Compare insurance claims, dispatch notes, and the accident register.
- Update missing fields.
- Collect state reports if available.
During
- Provide the register first, then supporting records.
- Explain follow-up from the saved documents.
After
- Add a crash intake checklist.
- Review register entries monthly.
- Keep accident documents together.
Download
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Sources
eCFR · regulation
49 CFR 390.15 - Assistance in investigations and special studies
Accident register information and related recordkeeping.
Last checked: 2026-05-12
eCFR · regulation
49 CFR 390.5T - Definitions
Definitions used in the FMCSRs, including accident definition context.
Last checked: 2026-05-13