FMCSA’s tighter bond enforcement looms over freight brokers in 2026
Many freight brokers look forward to turning the page on 2025, another difficult year for the trucking industry, but they’re now facing what could be the most consequential regulatory shift in several years.
On January 16, 2026, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s long-awaited updates to broker and freight forwarder financial responsibility rules fully kick in, transforming the $75,000 surety bond from a largely paper requirement into a rigidly enforced floor. Freight brokers’ gross margins, especially on a margin dollars per load basis, have been under pressure for years. These changes will present further challenges to highly leveraged brokers who already don’t have much room to maneuver.
The rules, finalized in late 2023 and delayed by a year due to registration system issues, close loopholes that have allowed some brokers to operate with depleted or questionable financial security. Chief among the changes is the requirement for immediate suspension of operating authority if a broker’s available bond or trust fund dips below $75,000 and isn’t replenished within seven business days of notice. Surety providers and trustees must now electronically notify FMCSA of drawdowns or signs of insolvency, practically in real time.
Perhaps most disruptively, BMC-85 trust funds—the alternative to traditional surety bonds used by thousands of brokers—must now consist solely of cash or cash-equivalent assets that can be liquidated in seven days or less, and only federally regulated financial institutions can serve as trustees. A significant portion of existing trusts will no longer qualify, forcing brokers to scramble for new providers or revert to costlier bonds.
These stricter standards arrive at a dangerous time. The trucking market has spent much of 2024 and 2025 in a protracted trough, with contract rates from shippers remaining stubbornly low while spot rates paid to carriers have begun climbing again. Mid-market brokers in particular have amplified their risks by leveraging earnings multiple times over through credit facilities, often with covenants tied to gross margin percentages. When those margins shrink, because brokers must absorb rising carrier costs without fully passing them on to shippers, lenders demand repayment, creating a death spiral that can end in insolvency.
Broker math has been brutal. Many brokers entered the post-pandemic downturn with contract books locked in at rates that no longer cover escalating spot payouts. Spot rates, which bottomed out in the freight recession, have shown signs of life in late 2025, with dry van linehaul indices posting year-over-year gains even as overall volumes stagnate. Yet shippers, enjoying the leverage of excess capacity, have been slow to accept meaningful contract increases during bid seasons. The result is widespread margin compression, with some publicly traded brokerages reporting gross margins hovering in the low-to-mid teens, down from healthier levels seen in prior cycles.

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