Up against a limit? Don’t drive, but feel free to work!
Carriers often ask if drivers can unload or do post-trip inspections after hitting the hours-of-service limit. The short answer is, “Yes.”
The wording of the regulation is the key
Here is the critical wording in the hours-of-service regulations found at 395.3 and 395.5:
- 395.3: … no motor carrier shall permit or require any driver used by it to drive a property-carrying commercial motor vehicle, nor shall any such driver drive a property-carrying commercial motor vehicle, regardless of the number of motor carriers using the driver’s services...
- 395.5: … no motor carrier shall permit or require any driver used by it to drive a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle, nor shall any such driver drive a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle…
In other words, once a limit is reached, the driver cannot drive a commercial vehicle.
395.2 Definition of “driving” |
However, the driver can do on-duty tasks other than driving, such inspecting the vehicle, and loading or unloading.
Here are the specific limits:
- A property-carrying driver must stop driving after:
- 14 consecutive hours have elapsed since the start of the driver’s workday,
- 11 hours of driving (a 10-hour break is required to reset the 14- and 11-hour limits),
- 8 hours of driving without a non-driving break of 30 minutes or more, and
- 60 hours in 7 days or 70 hours in 8 days of on-duty time.
- As passenger-carrying driver must stop driving after:
- 15 hours of driving and on-duty time is accumulated,
- 10 hours of driving (an 8-hour break is required to reset the 15- and 10-hour limits),
- 60 hours in 7 days or 70 hours in 8 days of on-duty time.
Potential issues
If a driver does on-duty activities once the limit has been reached, the impact will be that the driver is delaying the beginning of the required break. This in turn delays when the driver can resume driving the commercial vehicle. Here is an example:
- The driver arrives at the customer and reaches the 14-hour limit within minutes of arrival.
- The driver then spends 2 hours unloading.
- After unloading the driver goes off duty.
- 10 hours from when the driver went off duty (not 10 hours from when the driver stopped driving) is when the driver will be eligible to drive again.
The same is true no matter what length of break is required.
Key to remember: A driver can work once a limit in 395.3 or 395.5 is reached. However, the time spent working is delaying the start of the driver’s required break, and therefore delaying when the driver will be able to drive again.