Why Truckers Who Fail an English Test Can Now Be Pulled Off the Road
A federal law signed this year settles a question that had lingered in trucking regulation for a decade: what happens to a commercial driver who cannot read a highway sign or answer an officer’s question in English. Starting in 2026, the answer is immediate. The driver goes out of service, on the shoulder, until someone else can move the truck.
Congress passed the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2026 on February 3, which President Trump signed into law. The bill directs the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration to update its regulations so that any driver found in violation of the English Language Proficiency requirement under 49 CFR 391.11(b)(2) automatically receives an out-of-service order at a roadside inspection.
A Rule That Existed for Decades but Went Unenforced
Section 391.11(b)(2) of the federal code required commercial drivers to read and speak English well enough to converse with the public, understand highway signs and signals, respond to law enforcement, and complete legible reports for decades before this year’s law took effect. What changed is not the underlying requirement but the consequence for failing it.
A 2016 FMCSA memo instructed inspectors not to place drivers out of service over English proficiency violations, effectively turning a written rule into one nobody enforced at the roadside. That changed in April 2025, when a White House executive order called for stricter enforcement of the existing standard. The Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance responded by adding English proficiency to its North American Standard Out-of-Service Criteria on June 25, 2025, and the 2026 congressional action made that criteria permanent and mandatory nationwide rather than optional guidance individual states could choose to skip.
How the Test Works at a Roadside Stop
Inspectors assess English proficiency through two steps at a routine roadside inspection. The first is a conversational interview, where the officer asks the driver basic questions about the trip, the cargo, and the vehicle. The second is a highway sign recognition test, where the driver identifies the meaning of standard road signs shown by the inspector. A driver who cannot complete both segments satisfactorily receives an out-of-service order on the spot, which means the truck cannot move until a qualified driver arrives to take over.
Enforcement data shows the scale of the crackdown already underway. In the second half of 2025, English proficiency checks generated 12,308 out-of-service violations nationwide. In January 2026, a coordinated inspection operation across 26 states placed nearly 500 drivers out of service for English proficiency violations in a single three-day sweep.
Todd Spencer, OOIDA: ‘Nobody Cares About Road Safety More Than Professional Truck Drivers’
The Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association, the largest trade group representing small-business truckers, backed the change publicly. “Nobody cares about road safety more than professional truck drivers. That’s why OOIDA and truckers across America strongly support Congress’ actions to sideline drivers who fail to demonstrate English proficiency,” said Todd Spencer, president of OOIDA. “It’s common sense that truck drivers should demonstrate they can read critical road signs before getting behind the wheel of an 80,000 lb. vehicle on public roadways.”
From Executive Order to Federal Law in Under a Year
The path from a loosely enforced rule to a mandatory out-of-service order moved unusually fast by regulatory standards. An April 2025 White House executive order directed federal agencies to prioritize enforcement of existing English proficiency requirements for commercial drivers. The Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance responded within months, formally adding the requirement to its national inspection criteria that June. By February 2026, Congress had converted that inspection guidance into binding federal law through the Consolidated Appropriations Act, closing the gap between what inspectors were technically permitted to enforce and what they were required to enforce at every stop.
That speed left carriers and independent owner-operators little time to audit their own driver rosters before the stricter standard took hold nationwide. Fleet safety managers who had grown accustomed to treating English proficiency as a formality, given the 2016 memo discouraging enforcement, now face a regulatory environment where a single roadside stop can remove a driver and a truck from service with no warning.
The Trucking Industry Is Losing Drivers at the Same Time
The English proficiency crackdown is not happening in isolation. A separate federal rule that took effect in March 2026 bars asylum seekers, refugees, and DACA recipients from obtaining or renewing a commercial driver’s license, a change industry analysts estimate could remove up to 200,000 drivers from the workforce. Combined with stricter English proficiency enforcement, analysts project the driver supply could shrink by 5% to 12%, or 214,000 to 437,000 drivers, over the next two to three years.
The effects are already visible in freight pricing. Truckload spot and contract rates hit two-year highs in March 2026, with national linehaul spot rates running 27% above prior levels. Texas faces the sharpest capacity strain of any state. It handles more freight tonnage than anywhere else in the country and has a large immigrant driver population directly affected by the new licensing rules. The Southeast and parts of the Mountain West are seeing similar regional imbalances.
Critics Warn the Test Itself Is Inconsistent
Not everyone in the trucking industry views the rollout as a clean win for safety. Some fleet operators and driver advocacy groups have raised concerns that the conversational interview portion of the test lacks a standardized script, meaning two inspectors at two different weigh stations can reach different conclusions about the same driver’s proficiency. A driver who communicates comfortably with one officer’s phrasing but struggles with another’s regional accent or word choice could face inconsistent enforcement depending purely on which inspector happens to conduct the stop.
FMCSA has not yet published detailed guidance standardizing the interview questions inspectors use, leaving individual officers with discretion that critics argue could produce uneven results across states and even across inspection stations within the same state. Carriers operating in multiple states say they are training drivers defensively, treating every roadside stop as a potential proficiency check regardless of how confident a driver otherwise is in daily communication with dispatchers and customers.
What This Means for Everyday Drivers
Consumers who never set foot in a truck cab still feel the effects of a shrinking driver pool through freight costs baked into the price of groceries, furniture, appliances, and anything else that travels by highway before it reaches a store shelf. Tighter capacity historically pushes shipping costs up, and those costs generally pass through to retail prices with a lag of a few months.
There is a safety argument on the other side of the ledger. Supporters of the rule point to incidents where a driver’s inability to read warning signs, load limits, or detour instructions contributed to a crash, arguing that an 80,000-pound truck demands a driver who can respond immediately to written and verbal instructions from law enforcement and other officials in an emergency.
What Fleets and Drivers Should Do Now
A roadside out-of-service order strands the truck, the freight, and the driver at once, often for hours, so motor carriers should confirm every driver on their roster can pass both segments of the English proficiency check before dispatching a load. Independent drivers who are uncertain about their own proficiency should request a practice assessment through their state’s CDL testing office rather than risk an unplanned stop that could end a trip mid-route.
Drivers cited for an English proficiency violation can contest the finding through the standard FMCSA data challenge process (DataQs), available at dataqs.fmcsa.dot.gov, if they believe the roadside assessment was conducted improperly. The challenge process requires documentation of the stop, including the inspector’s report number, and a written explanation of why the driver disputes the finding, so drivers should request a copy of the inspection report before leaving the scene whenever possible.
Fleet safety trainers recommend building basic road sign vocabulary and common roadside phrases into onboarding for every new driver, treating the assessment as a standard part of new-hire preparation rather than an unexpected hurdle discovered only after a citation. Carriers that operate primarily in states with tighter capacity, including Texas and much of the Southeast, have the most to lose from an unplanned out-of-service order and are moving fastest to adjust their hiring and training pipelines around the new standard.
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