Idaho Stops Issuing CDLs to Out of State Truck Drivers Starting July 1
Idaho stopped issuing commercial driver’s licenses to non-residents on July 1, closing off a path that hundreds of out-of-state truckers used every year to get behind the wheel legally. The change puts Idaho among a fast-growing list of states tightening who can hold a commercial license within their borders, and it follows a federal crackdown that reshaped the rules nationwide.
What Changed in Idaho
Under House Bill 667, commercial driver applicants in Idaho must now be legal residents of the state and complete its standard licensing process from start to finish. The law ends a longstanding program that let qualified drivers who lived outside Idaho obtain a Commercial Driver’s License or Commercial Learner’s Permit through the state anyway.
Out-of-state and foreign-domiciled truckers can no longer use Idaho as a licensing jurisdiction unless they first establish residency there. Anyone who already holds an Idaho non-domiciled CDL keeps it until renewal, but new applications from non-residents will be turned away at the counter.
Why the Federal Government Pushed This
Idaho’s law follows changes at the federal level. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration amended its regulations governing non-domiciled CDL issuance, narrowing eligibility so that states can now issue non-domiciled CDLs only to applicants holding specific immigration classifications, including H-2A, H-2B and E-2 visa holders.
The federal agency had labeled problems with non-domiciled CDL oversight a threat to public safety after pressure from the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association, which argued that loose state-by-state rules let unqualified or improperly vetted drivers obtain commercial licenses. That pressure set off a wave of state-level responses well beyond Idaho.
How Idaho’s Numbers Grew Before the Cutoff
Idaho’s non-domiciled CDL program had grown quickly right up until the state shut it down. The Idaho Transportation Department issued or renewed 778 non-domiciled CDLs in 2024, up from 482 in 2023 and 328 in 2022. In just the first five months of 2025, the state had already issued or renewed 609, putting it on pace for another record year before lawmakers intervened.
Those numbers are small next to larger licensing states, but the trend line shows why Idaho lawmakers acted. A program that barely registered a few years ago had become a meaningful pipeline for commercial licenses by the time the legislature voted to end it.
What It Means for Truckers and Carriers
Reaction from the trucking industry has split along familiar lines. Supporters argue that tying commercial licensing tightly to residency and verification improves identity checks, keeps state records more accurate and makes enforcement more consistent across jurisdictions. Idaho joins states like Ohio and Texas in that camp.
Carriers who relied on Idaho’s program to license out-of-state drivers face a different problem. Trucking already struggles with driver shortages in some regions, and critics of the residency requirement warn it shrinks the available pool of qualified applicants, makes recruiting harder and pushes up costs for carriers that depended on Idaho as a licensing option.
Which States Are Doing the Same
Idaho is not acting alone. Texas suspended issuance to many categories of non-domiciled applicants earlier this year, and Ohio announced it does not intend to resume issuing new non-domiciled CDLs after completing a review of roughly 5,000 existing credential holders in that state. Trucking industry groups have also asked a federal court to strip New York and California of their CDL-issuing authority over separate compliance disputes, a sign the fight over who can license commercial drivers is far from settled.
Drivers currently licensed through Idaho’s non-domiciled program should confirm their renewal timeline directly with the Idaho Transportation Department: the residency requirement applies to new and renewal applications going forward, not to credentials issued before July 1.
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