Glossary
DBA (doing business as)
A DBA, short for doing business as, is a trade name a company uses that differs from its registered legal name. A carrier legally named, say, JLR Logistics LLC might operate publicly as Sunbelt Freight. On the FMCSA record a carrier has one legal name and can carry a DBA name alongside it.
Why brokers run into it
The name on a rate confirmation, an invoice, or an email signature is often the DBA or a shortened version, while the name on the operating authority and insurance filings is the legal entity. A difference between the two is common and usually harmless. It becomes a signal when the names cannot be reconciled at all: the DBA resolves to a different USDOT number, or the legal name on the authority belongs to an unrelated company.
The fraud angle
Identity-based freight fraud leans on name confusion. A bad actor books a load using the identity of a real, well-rated carrier, then supplies its own payment details under a similar-looking DBA. The federal record is the arbiter of which legal entity a USDOT number and authority actually belong to. Matching the name you are dealing with to the legal name on the record, not just to a DBA, is how you confirm you are talking to the carrier you think you are.
A concrete case
Suppose a rate confirmation comes back signed by "Sunbelt Freight," but the MC number on it resolves to a legal entity named JLR Logistics LLC with Sunbelt Freight listed as its DBA. That reconciles, and the booking is with a known entity. Now suppose the same DBA resolves to a USDOT number whose legal name is an unrelated company, or to no record at all. That is the mismatch worth stopping on, because a working DBA and a borrowed identity look identical until the names are traced back to the legal entity on the record. The record is what settles which company a DBA actually belongs to.
Related terms
Reincarnated (chameleon) carrier
A carrier that re-registers as a "new" company to shed a bad safety record, unpaid fines, or a revocation, continuing the same operation under a fresh USDOT number. The pattern shows up in shared addresses, officers, phones, and equipment.
Carrier identity theft
Impersonating a legitimate carrier, using its name, MC number, and documents, to book and steal freight or divert its payments. The impersonated carrier's clean record is what makes the fraud work.
USDOT number
The federal registration number every interstate carrier must hold. The primary key of the federal carrier record.
fleetfax reads public FMCSA data and is not affiliated with FMCSA or the U.S. Department of Transportation. This page explains terminology; it is not legal advice.