Georgia (GA) Trucking Compliance: Filings, Registrations & Permits
Georgia-based motor carriers must keep their federal filings current (USDOT/MCS-150, UCR, IFTA, IRP, and Form 2290 HVUT) and, for intrastate operation, register through the Georgia Department of Revenue and Department of Public Safety. Georgia has no separate weight-distance or highway-use tax, so IFTA fuel reporting and standard apportioned registration cover most carriers.
Georgia-specific requirements
What keeps Georgia relatively simple is what it does NOT have: unlike New York (NY HUT), Kentucky (KYU), New Mexico, and Oregon, Georgia imposes no separate weight-distance or highway-use tax on top of IFTA, so there's no extra per-mile mileage tax return for Georgia miles. The Georgia-specific layer is split across agencies: the Department of Revenue handles IFTA and IRP apportioned registration, while the Department of Public Safety's Motor Carrier Compliance Division oversees intrastate operating authority, safety, and roadside enforcement, and GDOT issues oversize/overweight permits. Georgia is a major Southeast freight hub anchored by the Port of Savannah and the Atlanta interstate crossroads (I-75, I-85, I-20, I-16), so high-volume drayage and regional carriers should keep apportioned and intrastate credentials tightly in order. If you run into NY, KY, NM, or OR, you'll still owe those states' weight-distance taxes even though Georgia itself doesn't charge one.