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FMCSA Compliance

UCR 2026 Deadline and Late-Filing Penalties

The 2026 UCR portal opened October 1, 2025; pay before January 1, 2026 to operate legally. Miss it and the full fee is still owed, plus state enforcement.

Last updated June 18, 2026
7 min read
FMCSA Compliance

By Korey Sharp-Paar · Founder, FastUCR Filing

For the 2026 registration year, UCR registration and the fee must be completed before January 1, 2026 to operate legally - the 2026 portal opened October 1, 2025. Miss the deadline and the full bracket fee is still owed (there is no proration and no federal late fee), but a non-registrant may face state enforcement: citations, out-of-service orders, and state-set fines.

For the 2026 registration year, you must complete your UCR registration and pay the fee before January 1, 2026 to operate legally. The 2026 portal through the National Registration System opened October 1, 2025, and enforcement against non-registrants begins January 1, 2026. If you miss the deadline the fee is still owed, and a non-registrant may then face state enforcement. This page pins the concrete 2026 dates and consequences; for the year-agnostic mechanics, see the when is UCR due guide.

When Is the 2026 UCR Deadline?

The operative date is the one the UCR Plan states plainly: an operation subject to UCR must complete its registration and pay its fee before January 1 of the registration year to continue operating legally. In practice that makes the back half of the prior year the 2026 renewal season:

  • October 1, 2025— The 2026 registration portal through the National Registration System opened. Filings submitted from this date forward are effective for the 2026 registration year.
  • On or before December 31, 2025— The last clean day to pay. New York's DOT guidance for the 2026 registration year is explicit: payments are due on or before December 31, 2025 to ensure processing by the January 1, 2026 enforcement date.
  • January 1, 2026— Enforcement of the 2026 registration begins. A carrier without valid 2026 UCR is out of compliance as of this date.

There is no statutory grace period. Some states exercise discretion in the first days of January, but that is discretion you cannot plan around — a single inspector at a scale house is enough to put a non-compliant truck out of service on January 2.

What the 2026 UCR Fee Actually Is

Filing late does not change the fee. The government fee owed is the standard 49 CFR 367.50bracket fee, keyed to the number of commercial motor vehicles you operated in interstate commerce — not to the date you file. The 2026 bracket fees are identical to 2025:

UCR government fee brackets for the 2026 registration year under 49 CFR 367.50.
BracketFleet size (CMVs)2026 fee per entity
B10–2$46
B23–5$138
B36–20$276
B421–100$963
B5101–1,000$4,592
B61,001+$44,836

Two things follow directly from this table. First, there is no proration— the full annual bracket fee applies whether you file in January or in November of 2026. Second, the fee is the same whether you file on time or late; the bracket figure does not include any late-payment surcharge. For the full bracket-by-bracket walkthrough, see the UCR tiers and fees guide.

Is There a Federal Late Penalty?

No. This is the single most misunderstood point about a late UCR. 49 CFR 367.50 sets only the per-entity bracket fee — it contains no late-payment penalty, no interest, and no surcharge. The fee remains owed after the deadline, but the federal rule does not bolt a fine onto it.

The real consequence of filing late is state enforcement. UCR enforcement is delegated to the participating states under 49 USC §14504a, and penalty amounts are set at the state level under each state's adopted UCR statute — they are not written into 367.50. That is why there is no single national late-fee number: a missed 2026 UCR exposes you to citations, out-of-service orders, and fines that vary by state. The UCR late-filing penalties guide breaks down what each state can do once the deadline passes.

What Enforcement Looks Like After January 1, 2026

After the deadline the registration fee is still due, but a non-registrant may then be subjected to state enforcement action. At a roadside inspection, a commercial vehicle enforcement officer queries the National Registration System. If your 2026 UCR is missing, the typical chain is:

  • A citationunder the state's adopted UCR enforcement statute, with a fine amount set by that state.
  • An out-of-service order— the driver cannot continue operating that load until the 2026 UCR is filed and proof is presented.
  • Downstream cost— lost revenue from the detention, plus any court costs, all separate from the UCR fee itself.

The broader picture — how an out-of-service event can ripple into your CSA profile — is covered in the what happens if you miss UCR guide.

If You Already Missed It, File Now

You can file for the 2026 registration year at any point during 2026; the registration is effective from the date of filing forward. Filing late stops the ongoing exposure the moment the payment confirms, but it does not erase enforcement actions already taken against you — a citation or out-of-service order issued before you filed still stands. The fastest way out of an active out-of-service order is to get the 2026 filing posted and present the confirmation. Step-by-step, the how to file UCR guide walks the base-state, fleet-count, and submission decisions.

File your 2026 UCR today

Same-business-day electronic submission. We handle base-state routing and fleet-count validation, and the federal fee is line-itemized separately from our flat service fee.

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Bottom line:For 2026, register and pay before January 1, 2026 — the portal opened October 1, 2025 and there is no grace period. There is no federal late fee in 49 CFR 367.50 and no proration: the full bracket fee (B1 $46 through B6 $44,836) is owed whenever you file. The cost of being late is state enforcement — citations, out-of-service orders, and fines that vary by state. If you missed it, file today.

Frequently Asked Questions

When is UCR due for the 2026 registration year?

For the 2026 registration year, you must complete your UCR registration and pay the fee before January 1, 2026 to operate legally. The UCR Plan states registration must be completed and the fee paid before January 1 of the registration year, and New York’s DOT guidance puts it concretely: 2026 payments are due on or before December 31, 2025 to ensure processing by the January 1, 2026 enforcement date. The 2026 registration portal through the National Registration System opened October 1, 2025.

What happens if I miss the UCR deadline?

Enforcement against non-registrants begins January 1, 2026. After the deadline the fee is still owed, but a non-registrant may then be subjected to state enforcement — citations, out-of-service orders, and fines that vary by state. There is no grace period in the UCR Plan’s guidance, so a carrier without valid 2026 UCR on January 1 is out of compliance as of that date.

Is there a federal late penalty for filing UCR late?

No. 49 CFR 367.50 sets only the per-entity bracket fee; it contains no late-payment penalty or interest charge. The consequence of filing late is state enforcement, not a federal surcharge. Penalty amounts are set at the state level under each participating state’s adopted UCR statute, not in 367.50.

Do I still owe the full UCR fee if I file after January 1?

Yes. The fee remains owed after the deadline, and there is no proration — the full annual bracket fee under 49 CFR 367.50 applies no matter when in 2026 you file. Filing late does not reduce the bracket fee and does not increase it; the dollar figure is keyed to your fleet-size bracket, not the filing date.

Can I be put out of service for an unpaid UCR?

Yes. UCR enforcement is delegated to the participating states, and a roadside officer who queries the National Registration System and finds no valid 2026 UCR can issue an out-of-service order and a citation under that state’s adopted UCR statute. The out-of-service order typically holds until the filing is completed and proof is presented. Fines and court costs are separate from the UCR fee itself and vary by state.