Skip to main content
24/7(239) 526-873324/7

MVR vs CDLIS vs PSP: the three driver history reports compared

MVR returns the state DMV record of license-eligible events for one state. CDLIS is the AAMVA pointer that tells you every state where the driver has held a CDL since 1996. PSP returns 5 years of FMCSA roadside inspections plus 3 years of crashes. A complete 49 CFR §391.23 pre-employment packet runs all three, plus the §382.701(a) Clearinghouse query for CDL drivers.

Side-by-side: MVR vs CDLIS vs PSP

DimensionMVR (state DMV)CDLIS (AAMVA)PSP (FMCSA)
SourceState DMV recordAAMVA federal pointerFMCSA MCMIS via NIC Federal
What it showsLicense status, convictions, suspensionsEvery state where driver held a CDL since 1996Roadside inspections + reportable crashes
Lookback3 years standard, up to 7-10 years optionalSince 19965 years inspections, 3 years crashes
GeographyOne state per pullNationwide pointerNationwide CMV inspections
CDL or non-CDLBothCDL onlyBoth
ConsentDPPA + FCRADPPA + FCRAFMCSA PSP MOU + FCRA
Typical cost$4-$30 per state~$5 per query$10 per report
CFR anchor§391.23(a)§384.225§391.23(d)

When to choose MVR alone

For non-CDL drivers with single-state license history, an MVR alone covers the §391.23(a) license-history requirement. The driver self-certifies on the §391.21 application that they have only ever been licensed in the one state, and the carrier pulls that one MVR. CDLIS is empty for a non-CDL driver (the AAMVA pointer only contains CDL events), and PSP is optional but often added as a $10 default item on the file.

For the §391.25 annual review, the MVR is the only required item. PSP is not part of the annual review (it is a §391.23 pre-employment item). CDLIS is also not part of the annual review — once a year is overkill for a pointer record that only changes when the driver applies for a new state CDL.

When to choose CDLIS

CDLIS is the discovery instrument for any CDL driver. The §391.23(a) regulation requires the carrier to obtain the violation record from every state where the driver held a license during the prior 3 years. For a CDL driver, the driver self-disclosure on the application is not enough — drivers forget, lie, or have CDL events the application form doesn’t surface. The AAMVA pointer is the authoritative answer.

CDLIS is also the §383.73 single-license enforcement mechanism. A driver may hold only one CDL across all jurisdictions; CDLIS is the database that lets a state DMV check before issuing a new CDL. For a hiring carrier, a CDLIS query that returns multiple active CDLs is a bright-line disqualifier.

When to choose PSP

PSP is the right call when the question is "what does this driver actually do on the road?" Roadside inspectors document HOS violations, equipment defects, pre-trip issues, and load-securement problems that often never escalate to a state-court conviction. None of those land on an MVR — they land on PSP. The $10 cost is small relative to the audit-defense value of having documented evidence of the §391.23(d) good-faith investigation.

PSP is also driver-centric across employers. A driver who worked for two carriers in the prior 3 years has both sets of inspection events on the same PSP report. That makes PSP the single best source for cross-employer driving behavior — far more efficient than chasing each previous DOT-regulated employer for a §391.23(a)(2) inquiry.

Why most carriers run all three

For a CDL driver, the four-source bundle (MVR + CDLIS + PSP + Clearinghouse pre-employment query) is the operating standard. The four reports answer different §391.23 questions and the §391.51 DQ file is incomplete without the union of all four. Bundled DOT Pre-Employment lands at $100 because the four-report package is the operating standard for new-hire CDL screening.

For non-CDL CMV drivers, the bundle drops to MVR + PSP (no CDLIS, no Clearinghouse). PSP still applies because the FMCSA roadside-inspection program covers any CMV under §390.5, not just CDL-eligible vehicles.

Frequently asked questions

Which of the three is required by 49 CFR §391.23?

The MVR is explicitly required at §391.23(a) for every state where the driver held a license during the prior 3 years. CDLIS is not named in §391.23 but is the only practical way to satisfy the multi-state requirement for a CDL driver — without CDLIS the carrier cannot reliably know which states to query. PSP is not strictly required but is the most efficient single-report evidence of the §391.23(d) safety-performance investigation across all DOT-regulated employers.

Can I skip CDLIS if the driver has only ever held one state CDL?

Technically yes, but in practice no carrier skips CDLIS for a CDL driver. The risk of missing a prior out-of-state CDL the driver forgot to disclose is real, and a CDLIS query is fast and cheap. Most carriers run CDLIS as a default item on every CDL pre-employment file.

How much does the three-report bundle cost?

For a single-state CDL driver: about $4-$30 for the MVR (state DMV fee), about $5 for CDLIS (AAMVA fee plus processing), and $10 for PSP (FMCSA fee). The DOT Pre-Employment package wraps all three plus the §382.701(a) Clearinghouse query for $100, with bundled DPPA + FCRA + Clearinghouse consent on a single intake.

Related comparisons

Run MVR + CDLIS + PSP in one order

The DOT Pre-Employment package bundles MVR + CDLIS + PSP + the §382.701(a) Clearinghouse pre-employment query for $100, with one consent form covering all four sources.

Run a report — from $40
This page is informational and is not legal advice. Verify regulatory requirements against the current text of 49 CFR Part 391 before relying on this comparison.