No — UCR is not the same as a USDOT number or an MC number, and an active USDOT and MC does not mean your UCR is handled. Your USDOT number is the FMCSA identifier for your operation, your MC number is your operating authority, and UCR (Unified Carrier Registration) is a separate annual registration and fee under 49 CFR Part 367, with statutory authority in 49 U.S.C. §§13301 and 14504a. You file UCR under your existing USDOT number every calendar year, and the fee is tiered by fleet size. If you cross a state line, all three apply — and none of them substitutes for the others.
Is UCR the Same as a DOT Number?
No. A USDOT numberis the unique identifier FMCSA assigns to a carrier, broker, or forwarder. It is how the agency tracks your safety record, your inspections, your crash history, and your registration status — and under MAP-21, essentially every FMCSA-regulated entity must have one. It is an identity, not a fee. UCR is a cost-recovery program: an annual fee that interstate carriers, brokers, freight forwarders, and leasing companies pay so participating states can fund commercial-vehicle enforcement and safety audits. The confusion is understandable because UCR is keyed to your USDOT number — but owning a USDOT number no more satisfies UCR than owning a driver's license pays your registration tab. For the full primer on the program, see the what is UCR registration guide.
What Is an MC Number, and How Is It Different?
An MC number (issued as MC, and as FF or MX for certain operations) is your operating authority— the docket number that defines what kind of operation you may run and what cargo you may haul. For-hire motor carriers, brokers, and freight forwarders generally need it; private carriers hauling their own goods often do not. Notably, the MC number was never a statutory requirement, and FMCSA has signaled it may phase the MC series out in favor of USDOT-number suffixes. UCR, by contrast, is not authority at all and is going nowhere — it is a flat annual fee under 49 CFR Part 367. The practical upshot: you can hold a perfectly valid, active MC number and still be cited for a missing UCR, because the two answer entirely different questions. The MC number asks “are you allowed to operate?” UCR asks “have you paid this year's enforcement fee?”
UCR vs USDOT vs MC, Side by Side
Three filings, three purposes, three systems of record:
| USDOT number | MC number | UCR | |
|---|---|---|---|
| What it is | FMCSA identifier for your operation | Operating authority (docket number) | Annual registration & fee |
| Governing law | MAP-21 / 49 U.S.C. §13501 | 49 U.S.C. §§13901–13902 | 49 CFR Part 367; 49 U.S.C. §§13301, 14504a |
| Cost basis | No fee to obtain the number | One-time application fee | Tiered by fleet size, every year |
| Frequency | Once; biennial MCS-150 update | Once (kept active) | Annual (calendar year) |
| System of record | FMCSA SAFER | FMCSA L&I / SAFER | National Registration System (ucr.gov) |
Do I Need UCR If I Already Have a USDOT Number?
Yes. An active USDOT number is a prerequisite for UCR, not a replacement for it. The order of operations for a new interstate carrier is USDOT number first, then (for for-hire operations) the MC number and BOC-3 process-agent designations, then UCR, and then the road-tax programs. UCR sits on top of your USDOT registration and has to be renewed every calendar year on its own. This is the same “separate filing” logic that trips carriers up with the road programs — see UCR vs IRP and UCR vs IFTA for the apportioned-plate and fuel-tax contrasts, or the combined UCR vs IRP vs IFTA guide for all three at once. The pattern is identical: each is its own obligation, and holding one never clears another.
What Does UCR Cost, vs a USDOT or MC Number?
Here is where the three diverge most sharply. A USDOT number costs nothing to obtain, and the MC number carries a one-time application fee. UCR, by contrast, is a recurring fee that scales with the size of your fleet. The 2026 federal brackets in 49 CFR 367.50 — unchanged from 2025 — run from the smallest operations to the largest national fleets:
| Bracket | Vehicles owned or operated | Federal fee per entity |
|---|---|---|
| B1 | 0–2 | $46 |
| B2 | 3–5 | $138 |
| B3 | 6–20 | $276 |
| B4 | 21–100 | $963 |
| B5 | 101–1,000 | $4,592 |
| B6 | 1,001+ | $44,836 |
Brokers, freight forwarders with no trucks, and leasing companies pay the smallest bracket fee (B1) regardless of how much freight they move — UCR counts self-propelled commercial motor vehicles operated, not loads arranged. Your USDOT and MC numbers carry no such fleet-size schedule. For how the count itself is built, see the how to count your UCR fleet guide; for the bracket boundaries in detail, the UCR tier by fleet size guide.
Can My USDOT Be Active While My UCR Is Not Compliant?
Yes — and this is the trap that catches carriers who assume one covers the other. Your USDOT and MC status live in FMCSA's SAFER system. Your UCR status lives in a different place entirely: the National Registration Systemat ucr.gov, operated by the UCR Plan. A roadside inspector verifies UCR there, keyed to your USDOT number — not in SAFER. So a truck can show a clean, active USDOT and still be placed out of service for a missing current-year UCR. If you want to confirm where you stand, check both systems: SAFER for authority, the National Registration System for UCR. The how to check your UCR status guide walks through the ucr.gov lookup step by step.
Bottom line:your USDOT number identifies you, your MC number authorizes you, and UCR is the separate annual fee you owe on top of both. An active USDOT and MC number does not make you UCR-compliant. File UCR under your USDOT number every calendar year, and verify it in the National Registration System — not just SAFER.
Have your USDOT but not your UCR?
That is the gap most carriers miss. FastUCR Filing files your UCR under your existing USDOT number with same-business-day electronic submission — federal fee line-itemized, service fee shown separately. Tier 1 from $80, or $70/year on auto-renew.
File UCR Now — from $80Ready to file? You can register directly through the National UCR Registration System at ucr.gov for the federal fee only, or use a third-party filing service like FastUCR Filing to handle base-state routing, fleet-count validation, and same-day submission for a flat service fee on top of the federal portion. Either way, the full walkthrough is in the how to file UCR guide.