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Medical Certification Workflow Gaps Pose Compliance Risk for Commercial Drivers

By MGN EditorialJune 11, 2026 at 12:00 AM

A procedural gap in the FMCSA's National Registry 2 medical certification process is leaving commercial drivers' licenses at risk, as physicians may be unaware of their data-upload obligations.

## Medical Certification Gap Threatens CDL Compliance Under FMCSA's National Registry 2 A growing compliance concern is emerging across the commercial transportation sector, as a procedural disconnect in the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's (FMCSA) National Registry 2 medical certification system puts commercial drivers' licenses (CDLs) at risk, according to FreightWaves. Under the updated National Registry 2 framework, licensed medical examiners are now required to upload driver examination results directly to the FMCSA, which in turn transmits the data to the relevant state licensing authority. However, FreightWaves reports that many physicians conducting these examinations may be unaware that this upload obligation exists — creating a silent but serious gap in the certification chain. The consequences of this workflow failure are significant. A driver's CDL status and, by extension, their entire livelihood can be jeopardised if a medical examiner fails to complete the digital submission, even when the driver has passed their physical examination and received a paper certificate. Carriers, too, face compliance exposure if driver medical records are not properly reflected in state systems. ### Why This Matters for the Freight and Maritime Sectors While the issue originates in road freight regulation, it carries direct relevance for maritime and intermodal operators who rely on CDL-holding drivers for port drayage, container haulage, and last-mile logistics. Any disruption to the CDL certification pipeline can tighten an already constrained driver pool and introduce compliance risk at the landside interface of maritime supply chains. Fleet operators and carrier compliance teams are advised to verify that their drivers' medical certification data has been successfully transmitted and recorded at the state level — not simply to retain the paper medical examiner's certificate. Proactive communication with medical examiners regarding their FMCSA upload responsibilities is also recommended. The FMCSA has not yet issued formal guidance addressing the scale of the problem, but industry observers are urging carriers to treat this as an active compliance risk rather than an administrative formality. *Source: FreightWaves*
#FMCSA#CDL compliance#commercial drivers#freight regulation#intermodal logistics#port drayage#medical certification#carrier compliance

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