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Georgia (GA) Trucking Compliance: Filings, Registrations & Permits

✦ The quick answer

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.

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What Georgia requires
UCR
The Unified Carrier Registration (UCR) is an annual federal program administered by the states, and Georgia participates. If you operate commercial motor vehicles in interstate commerce, you must register and pay the UCR fee every year. Your fee bracket is based on the total number of power units (trucks/tractors) in your fleet, not a flat per-truck rate. UCR registration opens in the fall for the following calendar year, and enforcement typically begins January 1. Brokers, freight forwarders, and leasing companies without trucks pay the smallest bracket. We help you confirm your correct fleet-size bracket, prepare an accurate registration, and validate the details before you submit it through the official UCR system. Always verify the current-year fee amounts on the official UCR site, since brackets are set annually.
Form 2290 (HVUT)
Form 2290 and the Heavy Vehicle Use Tax (HVUT) are federal, filed with the IRS, but they matter in Georgia because the state will not register or renew a qualifying heavy vehicle without proof of payment (a stamped Schedule 1). HVUT applies to vehicles with a taxable gross weight of 55,000 lbs or more. The tax for a vehicle at 55,000 lbs is $100, plus $22 for each additional 1,000 lbs over 55,000, up to a maximum of $550 for vehicles at 75,000 lbs and above. The HVUT period runs July 1 through June 30. For vehicles in use at the start of the period in July, the deadline to file is August 31. For a newly acquired or first-used vehicle, the deadline is the last day of the month after the month you first put it on the road. We help you calculate the correct taxable gross weight, prepare Form 2290, and validate your entries so your Schedule 1 comes back clean for your Georgia registration.
MCS-150
Your USDOT number and the MCS-150 form are how FMCSA tracks your carrier identity, fleet size, mileage, and operation type. Every interstate carrier and many intrastate Georgia carriers need a USDOT number, and the MCS-150 must be updated at least every two years (the biennial update) on a schedule tied to your USDOT number. Missing the biennial update can deactivate your USDOT number and put your operating authority at risk. Georgia requires intrastate carriers over certain weight thresholds to obtain and maintain a USDOT number as well. We help you keep your MCS-150 accurate (mileage, power-unit count, contact details), guide you through the biennial update timing based on your USDOT number, and validate the data before you file it with FMCSA.
IFTA
Georgia is a member of the International Fuel Tax Agreement (IFTA). If you operate qualified motor vehicles across state lines, you base your IFTA license in Georgia (your base jurisdiction) and file a single quarterly fuel tax return covering all member states and provinces. A qualified vehicle generally has two axles and a gross weight over 26,000 lbs, three or more axles regardless of weight, or is used in combination over 26,000 lbs. Georgia IFTA is administered by the Georgia Department of Revenue, which issues your license and decals. You then report total miles traveled and fuel purchased per jurisdiction each quarter so taxes net out correctly. Quarterly returns are due the last day of the month following each quarter: April 30, July 31, October 31, and January 31. Keep detailed mileage and fuel-purchase records. We help you organize trip and fuel data, calculate your quarterly figures, and validate the return before you file it with the Georgia Department of Revenue.
IRP
The International Registration Plan (IRP) lets you register your trucks once in Georgia and get apportioned plates valid in all member jurisdictions, with registration fees split based on the miles you run in each state or province. Georgia IRP is handled through the Georgia Department of Revenue Motor Vehicle Division. You'll report your fleet's distance by jurisdiction (actual miles for renewals, or estimated miles for a brand-new operation), and your Georgia apportioned credentials and cab card list every jurisdiction you're authorized to run in. IRP and IFTA are separate programs but both rely on accurate mileage records, so good recordkeeping serves both. We help you assemble your jurisdiction mileage, prepare your IRP application or renewal, and validate it before you submit to the state.
Permits
Beyond the core federal programs, Georgia carriers may need state-specific credentials. Intrastate for-hire carriers (hauling only within Georgia) register with the Georgia Department of Public Safety / Motor Carrier Compliance Division and must meet state insurance-filing requirements. Oversize or overweight loads require a permit from the Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) permit office, and certain routes, heights, or weights need additional clearance or escort. Carriers transporting hazardous materials or operating for hire intrastate have added registration and insurance obligations. We help you identify which Georgia permits and authority types apply to your operation, prepare the paperwork, and validate it. Always confirm current requirements and fees directly with GDOT and the Georgia Department of Public Safety before you rely on them.

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.

Georgia compliance calendar

JanuaryUCR enforcement begins for the new year; Q4 IFTA fuel tax return due January 31.
AprilQ1 IFTA fuel tax return due April 30.
JulyNew HVUT period begins July 1; Q2 IFTA fuel tax return due July 31.
AugustForm 2290 HVUT deadline (August 31) for vehicles in use during July.
OctoberQ3 IFTA fuel tax return due October 31; UCR registration typically opens for the next year.
OngoingMCS-150 biennial update due on the schedule tied to your USDOT number; IRP/IFTA renewals on your assigned cycle.

Frequently asked questions

Does Georgia have a weight-distance or highway-use tax like New York or Kentucky?+
No. Georgia does not charge a separate weight-distance or highway-use tax. Your fuel taxes are handled through your quarterly IFTA return. However, if you drive in New York (HUT), Kentucky (KYU), New Mexico, or Oregon, you must still file and pay those states' weight-distance taxes for the miles you run there.
Who handles IFTA and IRP in Georgia?+
The Georgia Department of Revenue administers both IFTA fuel tax licensing and IRP apportioned registration. Intrastate operating authority and safety enforcement fall under the Georgia Department of Public Safety's Motor Carrier Compliance Division, and oversize/overweight permits come from GDOT. We can help you prepare filings for each; confirm specifics with the relevant agency.
How much is the Form 2290 Heavy Vehicle Use Tax?+
For a vehicle with a taxable gross weight of 55,000 lbs, the HVUT is $100. Add $22 for each additional 1,000 lbs over 55,000, up to a maximum of $550 for vehicles at 75,000 lbs or more. The tax period runs July 1 to June 30, and the filing deadline for vehicles used in July is August 31. Georgia needs your stamped Schedule 1 to register the vehicle.
When are my Georgia IFTA returns due?+
IFTA fuel tax returns are due quarterly: April 30, July 31, October 31, and January 31 for the preceding quarter. You file one return with the Georgia Department of Revenue covering all member jurisdictions. Keep detailed mileage and fuel-purchase records, because that data drives the return.
Do I need a permit to run an oversize or overweight load in Georgia?+
Yes. Loads that exceed Georgia's legal size or weight limits require an oversize/overweight permit from the Georgia Department of Transportation, and some loads need designated routing or escorts. Requirements and fees vary by dimensions and route, so confirm current details with GDOT before you move. We can help you prepare and validate the application.
Is QuickTruckTax a filing service that submits my forms?+
No. QuickTruckTax helps you understand, prepare, and validate your filings, but it does not submit forms to the IRS, FMCSA, or any state agency on your behalf. We guide you so your paperwork is accurate and complete, and you file it through the official channels. This is general guidance, not legal or tax advice; always confirm with the relevant agency.
How this works: QuickTruckTax helps you understand, prepare, and validate your filing. We are not a filing service and never submit forms on your behalf — you always do the final review and submission. Figures here are estimates for guidance only and are not legal or tax advice. Confirm current rules, fees, and deadlines with the IRS, FMCSA, or your state agency.