What is the UCR base state rule?
The UCR base state rule says carriers must file UCR through the state where their principal place of business is located, even if that state is one of the few non-participating states. Carriers in non-participating states (Arizona, Florida, Hawaii, Maryland, New Jersey, Nevada, Oregon, Wyoming, Vermont, DC) file through the participating state where they conduct the most operations.
The 49 USC §14504a UCR framework requires every motor carrier subject to federal jurisdiction to register annually through the state where their principal place of business is located. This is the "base state rule" — the carrier files in their base state, the base state collects the fees, and the multi-state UCR database reflects the registration nationwide.
For carriers based in participating states (the 41 states plus the District of Columbia that participate in UCR), the base state rule is straightforward: the carrier files through their state's UCR portal, pays the standard fees for the relevant tier, and the registration is nationally recognized. There is no separate "out-of-state" filing required.
For carriers based in non-participating states (currently Arizona, Florida, Hawaii, Maryland, New Jersey, Nevada, Oregon, Wyoming, Vermont, DC, and the US territories), the rule modifies. The carrier files through a participating state — typically the state where they conduct the most operations or have the next-most-significant business presence. The choice of participating state for filing is left to the carrier; the registration is still nationally recognized.
For carriers genuinely uncertain about which state to file through (multi-state operations spread evenly across multiple states), filing through any participating state is acceptable. The federal layer of UCR doesn't penalize state-of-filing choice as long as the registration is on file in the multi-state UCR database. Most carriers in this situation file through the state where their largest customer or terminal is located.