Is there an applicable hours-of-service limit exemption my drivers could be using?
There are times when a driver that must obey the hours-of-service limits needs to exceed a limit. In such cases, there may be an applicable exemption.
This article provides information on what exemptions may be applicable when a driver is up against a limit. If using an exemption, the driver must meet the terms of the exemption and note the use of it in the hours-of-service record for the day (ELD or paper log). If the limit is exceeded and there is no applicable exemption or the driver misuses an exemption, the driver can be cited for operating past the limits found in 395.3 or 395.5.
14-hour limit (property-carrying drivers) or 15-hour limit (passenger-carrying drivers)
- 395.1(b): Adverse driving conditions exemption allows the driver to drive up to two hours past the limit to complete what normally could have been completed if an unknown adverse road, weather, or traffic condition is encountered
- 395.1(d)(2): Drivers of specially constructed oilfield vehicles that require special training can log waiting time at a well site as off-duty time and do not have to count the waiting time toward the 14-hour limit
- 395.1(e)(2): Drivers using the non-CDL property carrying 150 air-mile short-haul logging exemption can drive up to the 16th hour twice in a seven-day period
- 395.1(o): Property-carrying drivers that return to the work reporting location daily can drive up to the 16th hour once every 7 days or once since the driver’s last restart
- Interpretation Question 26 to 395.8: Personal conveyance can be used if the movement is for purely personal reasons (the driver is off duty and there is no benefit to the company) or the driver is ordered to move by a shipper, receiver, or law enforcement
10-hour (passenger-carrying drivers) or 11-hour (property-carrying drivers) driving limit
- Adverse driving conditions (see above for details)
- Personal conveyance (see above for details)
60- or 70-hour limit
- 395.1(c): Driver employed as driver-salespersons can exceed the 60/70-hour limits, provided they do not drive more than 40 hours in a 7-day period
- Personal conveyance (see above for details)
8- or 10-hour break requirement
- 395.1(g)(1) Split sleeper (property-carrying drivers) allows the driver to combined one short off-duty or sleeper break of two hours or more with a later sleeper berth period of 7 hours or more to meet the 10-hour break requirement
- 395.1(g)(2) Drivers of specially constructed oilfield vehicles resting at bunking facilities at a well location at an oilfield or in a sleeper berth are allowed to split their required break into two qualifying breaks, provided neither break is less than 2 hours and when combined the two breaks equal at least 10 hours.
- 395.1(g)(3) Split sleeper (passenger-carrying drivers) allows the driver to split their required break into two qualifying breaks, provided neither break is less than 2 hours and when combined the two breaks equal at least 8 hours.
Key to remember: If using an exemption to exceed an hours-of-service limit, the driver must meet the terms of the exemption, note the use of the exemption on the log for the day, and cannot operate when fatigued.