DOT Drug & Alcohol Rules for CDL Drivers: What’s Prohibited, How Testing Works & Why Refresher Training Matters
Every CDL driver in safety-sensitive service lives under two federal rulebooks — 49 CFR Part 40 and Part 382. This guide walks through what they require, what counts as a violation, how the Clearinghouse can now cost you your license, the year-by-year changes that keep reshaping the rules, and why keeping your training current is one of the smartest moves a driver or carrier can make.
Why CDL drivers need drug & alcohol training
Federal law treats driving a commercial motor vehicle as a safety-sensitive job. Under 49 CFR §382.601, before a CDL driver ever performs safety-sensitive functions, the employer must provide education on the DOT drug-and-alcohol rules — what’s prohibited, how testing works, what a refusal is, and the consequences of a violation. It isn’t paperwork for its own sake: the rules are detailed, they change often, and a single misunderstanding can put a driver out of work and downgrade their license.
This is education — not the whole program
Driver training covers the driver’s side. Employers are still responsible for their written policy, for running Clearinghouse queries, and for reporting violations. The strongest programs pair solid driver education with proper employer administration.
The two rulebooks: Part 40 vs. Part 382
DOT drug-and-alcohol compliance rests on two parts of the federal regulations. They work together, and CDL drivers are covered by both.
How testing is done
DOT’s government-wide procedures: how specimens are collected, how laboratories analyze them, the Medical Review Officer’s role, what counts as a refusal, and the return-to-duty process. It applies across all DOT modes — trucking, aviation, rail, transit, and more.
Who and when, for CDL drivers
FMCSA’s rules specific to commercial drivers: the prohibited conduct, the six types of tests, employer duties, the §382.601 driver education requirement, and Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse reporting and queries.
What’s prohibited
The rules draw bright lines. For a safety-sensitive CDL driver, each of the following is a violation:
- Alcohol concentration 0.04+. Reporting for or remaining on duty with a breath-alcohol concentration of 0.04 or higher.
- Alcohol on the job. Using alcohol while performing safety-sensitive functions — or within 4 hours before.
- Alcohol after an accident. Using alcohol within 8 hours of an accident, or until you’ve been tested, if post-accident testing applies.
- Controlled substances. Using any controlled substance, unless prescribed by a licensed medical practitioner who has advised it won’t affect safe operation.
- Marijuana — always. Using marijuana at any time — prohibited regardless of state legalization or a medical card. Federally it is still off-limits for DOT drivers.
- Refusing a test. Refusing to take a required test — treated exactly the same as a positive result.
Marijuana: still a hard no
Marijuana drives roughly 60% of all positive DOT drug tests. State legalization and medical cards change nothing for DOT drivers — marijuana is prohibited at all times, and a positive is a violation that lands you in the Clearinghouse. CBD products are risky for the same reason: they can contain enough THC to trigger a positive.
When DOT testing happens
There are six situations in which a CDL driver can be tested. Knowing them removes the surprise — and the temptation to refuse.
Pre-employment
A negative drug test is required before a driver first performs safety-sensitive functions.
Random
Unannounced, spread through the year by a scientifically valid method. For 2026: 50% of drivers for drugs, 10% for alcohol.
Reasonable suspicion
Ordered when a trained supervisor observes specific signs of drug or alcohol use.
Post-accident
Required after qualifying crashes — any fatality, or a citation plus an injury or a towed vehicle.
Return-to-duty
A directly observed, negative test required after a violation, before returning to safety-sensitive work.
Follow-up
Unannounced tests directed by a Substance Abuse Professional after return-to-duty — at least 6 in the first 12 months.
Refusals count as positives
One of the most costly and avoidable mistakes a driver can make is treating a test as optional. Under Part 40, a refusal to test is treated exactly like a positive result — same violation, same Clearinghouse entry, same return-to-duty requirement.
Refusals include failing to show up in the time allowed, leaving before the test is complete, not providing enough specimen without a valid medical explanation, declining a directly observed collection when one is required, or tampering with a sample. With refusals rising across the industry, this is exactly the kind of rule drivers need to understand clearly.
The Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse
Since January 2020, FMCSA has run a federal database — the Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse — that tracks every CDL and CLP drug-and-alcohol violation. Employers must query it before hiring a driver and at least once a year for current drivers, and they must report violations. A violation puts the driver in “prohibited” status, which bars them from performing safety-sensitive functions until they complete the return-to-duty process.
The 2024 change every driver should know
As of November 18, 2024, a “prohibited” status no longer just sidelines a driver at work — state licensing agencies must downgrade the CDL or CLP, removing commercial driving privileges until the driver’s status returns to “not prohibited.” More than 150,000 drivers are currently in prohibited status, and many haven’t started the steps to get back. Your license now depends on staying out of that column.
Employers who need help running queries, reporting, and tracking status can lean on DotMotusCompliance Clearinghouse services — but every driver should also understand how the Clearinghouse affects their own record.
What happens after a violation: the return-to-duty process
A violation is serious, but it doesn’t have to end a career. Federal rules (Part 40, Subpart O) lay out a clear path back:
- 1. Immediate removal. The driver is pulled from all safety-sensitive functions right away.
- 2. SAP evaluation. A DOT-qualified Substance Abuse Professional (SAP) evaluates the driver and prescribes education and/or treatment.
- 3. Complete the program. The driver finishes the SAP’s recommendations and returns for a follow-up evaluation.
- 4. Return-to-duty test. A directly observed test with a negative result is required before going back to safety-sensitive work.
- 5. Follow-up testing. The SAP sets an unannounced follow-up testing plan — at least 6 tests in the first 12 months, and possibly for up to 5 years.
Only after the status changes to “not prohibited” can a driver reinstate a downgraded CDL.
The rules, year by year
DOT drug-and-alcohol regulation is not static. Here is how the framework that governs CDL drivers has changed — and kept changing — over the years:
- 1991
Congress mandates testing
The Omnibus Transportation Employee Testing Act required drug and alcohol testing for safety-sensitive transportation workers — including CDL drivers.
- 1995
Part 382 takes effect
FMCSA’s controlled-substances and alcohol rules for CDL drivers (49 CFR Part 382) phase in, built on DOT’s testing procedures in 49 CFR Part 40.
- 2001
The modern Part 40 + the random-rate model
DOT rewrote Part 40 (“Procedures for Transportation Workplace Drug and Alcohol Testing Programs”) and FMCSA’s “Controlled Substances and Alcohol Use and Testing” rule set the performance-based random-testing model still used today — 50% for drugs, 10% for alcohol, adjusted by the industry positive rate.
- Jan 1, 2018
Four opioids added to the panel
DOT expanded the drug-testing panel to include the semi-synthetic opioids hydrocodone, hydromorphone, oxymorphone, and oxycodone (think OxyContin, Vicodin, Percocet, Dilaudid).
- Jan 6, 2020
The Clearinghouse goes live
FMCSA’s Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse launched. Employers must run pre-employment and annual queries and report violations; a violation puts a driver in “prohibited” status.
- Jan 1, 2020
Random drug rate doubles
Because the industry positive rate hit 1.0%, FMCSA raised the random drug-testing rate from 25% to 50%. It has stayed there every year since.
- Oct 7, 2021
Clearinghouse-II rule published
FMCSA finalized the second Clearinghouse rule, setting up state license consequences for prohibited drivers.
- Jan 6, 2023
Full query replaces the manual check
After a three-year phase-in, a complete Clearinghouse query now satisfies the old manual previous-employer drug-and-alcohol check.
- Jun 1, 2023
Oral-fluid testing authorized
DOT added oral-fluid (saliva) testing to Part 40 as an alternative to urine — but it can’t be used until HHS certifies at least two oral-fluid laboratories.
- Nov 18, 2024
Your CDL is now on the line
Clearinghouse-II’s compliance date arrived: state licensing agencies must downgrade the CDL or CLP of any driver in “prohibited” status — removing commercial driving privileges until the return-to-duty process is complete.
- Jan 8, 2026
Rates hold at 50% / 10%
DOT confirmed the random rates stay at 50% for drugs and 10% for alcohol for 2026 — the sixth straight year, driven by stubbornly high positive and refusal rates.
- Jun 10, 2026
Part 40 fine-tuned again
A new Part 40 amendment took effect to fix oral-fluid implementation details and update terminology. Oral-fluid testing still isn’t usable in practice — there are still no HHS-certified oral-fluid labs.
Dates reflect when key rules took effect or were announced. Several recent changes — the Clearinghouse, the random-rate increase, the CDL downgrade, and oral-fluid testing — all landed within the last few years, which is exactly why current training matters.
Why it pays to refresh your training when the rules change
There is no fixed federal clock that says CDL drivers must retake drug-and-alcohol education every year. But as the timeline above shows, the rules move — and training that was accurate a few years ago can quietly fall out of date. Here’s why a refresher is worth it:
The rules keep moving
In just a few years the panel gained four opioids, the Clearinghouse arrived, random rates doubled, oral-fluid testing was added, and a missed violation can now cost a driver their CDL. Knowledge from even two or three years ago can be out of date.
Outdated knowledge causes violations
Most violations and refusals come from misunderstanding the rules — not knowing marijuana is still banned, what counts as a refusal, or how a prescription should be handled. Refresher training closes those gaps.
Your CDL is directly at stake
Since November 2024, a “prohibited” status doesn’t just sideline a driver — it downgrades the license. Drivers need to understand exactly how to stay out of that status.
Carriers need a documented culture
Up-to-date, documented driver education shows auditors and insurers a real compliance program — and helps reduce positive tests and refusals across the fleet.
New hires and returning drivers
Every new CDL hire needs this education before safety-sensitive work, and a driver returning after a violation benefits from a clear refresher on the rules they’ll be held to.
Cheap insurance
A short refresher costs a fraction of what one violation costs — a sidelined driver, a parked truck, and months in the return-to-duty process.
A simple rule of thumb
Train every driver at hire, refresh after any major rule change, and consider a periodic refresher as part of your safety program. It keeps drivers sharp, keeps your records audit-ready, and keeps trucks moving.
The training: Drug & Alcohol — CDL Driver Certification
DotMotusCompliance’s Drug & Alcohol — CDL Driver Training Certification is a clear, plain-English course built on 49 CFR Part 40 and Part 382. It gives drivers exactly what §382.601 calls for — and gives carriers a documented record that the education was delivered.
What you’ll learn
- What conduct is prohibited under DOT drug and alcohol rules — including alcohol limits and the all-times marijuana ban
- When DOT testing applies: the six test types and what triggers each one
- What counts as a refusal to test — and why it is treated exactly like a positive
- How the Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse works and how a “prohibited” status can downgrade your CDL
- The consequences of a violation and the step-by-step return-to-duty (RTD) process
- The realities of marijuana, CBD, and prescription medications under DOT rules
Course at a glance
Important
This course provides driver education and awareness. It does not cover every FMCSA regulation, does not replace your employer’s specific policy, and is not legal advice. Employers remain responsible for Clearinghouse queries and reporting.
Train your drivers the right way — and keep them road-legal
Give every CDL driver clear, current education on the DOT drug-and-alcohol rules, with an instant certificate for your records. Enroll one driver or your whole roster.
Drug & alcohol FAQs
Tap any question to expand. Still have questions? Call (307) 200-8338 or email Support@DotMotusCompliance.com.
Is this training mandatory?
Does this course satisfy the §382.601 driver-education requirement?
What is the difference between Part 40 and Part 382?
Is marijuana allowed if it’s legal in my state or I have a medical card?
What about CBD products?
What counts as a refusal to test?
What is the Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse?
Can the Clearinghouse cost me my CDL?
What happens after a violation?
What are the 2026 random testing rates?
Is oral-fluid (saliva) testing being used now?
How often do I need to retake this training?
Who is a “safety-sensitive” driver?
What is a SAP?
Does a failed test end my driving career?
Can DotMotusCompliance help with more than training?
Disclaimer: Produced by DotMotusCompliance Inc. for general informational purposes, based on publicly available FMCSA and DOT sources, current as of June 2026. This is a commercial advertisement for a paid training service and is not legal advice. This material does not cover every FMCSA regulation and does not replace an employer’s specific drug-and-alcohol policy. DotMotusCompliance Inc. is a private, for-profit company and is not a government agency and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or acting on behalf of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) or the U.S. Department of Transportation. Regulations and testing rates can change; confirm current requirements before relying on this information.
