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PHMSA Hazmat Registration — 49 CFR §§ 107.601–107.620

DOT Hazmat Registration:
The Annual PHMSA Program Explained

Required to ship certain quantities of hazardous materials?
Federal law requires annual registration with PHMSA — a separate obligation from your ongoing 49 CFR Part 172 compliance.

▸ Quick Answer

The PHMSA Hazmat Registration Program requires offerors and transporters of certain high-threshold quantities of hazardous materials to file an annual registration statement with the U.S. Department of Transportation and pay a fee under 49 CFR §§ 107.601–107.620. For 2025–2026, fees are $275 for small businesses and $2,600 for all others, plus a $25 processing fee. Registration runs July 1 to June 30 and is completed through the PHMSA Portal. Important: this registration is separate from — and does not replace — the ongoing 49 CFR Part 172 compliance obligations that apply to every hazmat shipment.

Source: 49 CFR §§ 107.601–107.620 — PHMSA 2025-2026 Hazardous Materials Registration Information Brochure
Layer 1 — The program

What Is the PHMSA Hazmat Registration Program?

The Hazmat Registration Program has been in operation since 1992. It requires companies that ship or transport hazardous materials above specific quantity thresholds to register annually with PHMSA and pay a fee. The fees fund grants distributed to states, Indian tribes, and nonprofit organizations for hazardous materials emergency response planning and training.

What registration does
Registers your company with PHMSA as an offeror or transporter of significant quantities of hazardous materials. Provides a DOT Certificate and registration number that must be kept on-board vehicles and on file at your principal place of business. Funds emergency response infrastructure across the US.
What registration does NOT do
Registration does not make your individual shipments compliant with 49 CFR Part 172. It does not cover your shipping papers, labels, placards, employee training, or the 24-hour emergency phone number requirement. Those are separate obligations that apply to every hazmat shipment regardless of whether registration is required.
⚠ Registration and compliance are not the same thing

Many shippers assume that completing PHMSA registration means their hazmat program is in order. It does not. Registration is an annual fee paid to the federal government. 49 CFR Part 172 compliance — including the 24-hour emergency phone number on every shipping paper — is a separate, ongoing operational requirement that applies to every individual shipment, regardless of whether your company is required to register.

Registration gets you a certificate. Compliance keeps your shipments legal.

Once you've completed PHMSA registration, every individual shipment you offer for transport must still comply with 49 CFR Part 172 — shipping papers with the correct UN number and hazard class, DOT labels on each package, vehicle placards where required, and a 24-hour emergency phone number on every shipping paper. That last requirement is where most shippers have a gap.

PHMSA registration (annual program)
  • Annual fee paid once per registration year
  • Covers your company — not individual shipments
  • Required only above specific quantity thresholds
  • Filed through the PHMSA portal (portal.phmsa.dot.gov)
  • Produces a DOT Certificate and registration number
49 CFR Part 172 compliance (every shipment)
  • Applies to every hazmat shipment, every mode
  • Requires compliant shipping papers, labels, placards
  • Requires a 24-hour monitored emergency phone number
  • Requires trained employees with records on file
  • Violations assessed per shipment by PHMSA and FMCSA
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Layer 2 — Applicability

Who Must Register?

Registration is required for offerors and transporters of hazardous materials who meet any of the six threshold categories below. These thresholds were established by law (Categories A–E) starting in 1992, with Category F added in 2000.

A
Highway route-controlled quantities of Class 7 (radioactive) material
As defined in 49 CFR § 173.403. A highway route-controlled quantity may be shipped by highway, rail, air, or water — the mode does not change the registration requirement.
B
More than 25 kg (55 lbs) of Division 1.1, 1.2, or 1.3 explosives
Per 49 CFR § 173.50, in a motor vehicle, rail car, or freight container.
C
More than 1 liter per package of a material poisonous by inhalation (Hazard Zone A)
Materials meeting the criteria for Hazard Zone A as specified in § 173.116(a) for gases or § 173.133(a) for liquids.
D
Hazardous material in bulk packaging with capacity ≥ 3,500 gallons (liquids/gases) or ≥ 468 cubic feet (solids)
Note: registration is required even if placards are not — for example, a Class 9 material in bulk packaging above these thresholds requires registration.
E
Shipment of 5,000 lbs gross weight or more of one hazmat class requiring placarding
In other than bulk packaging, where placarding of a vehicle, rail car, or freight container is required for that class under 49 CFR Part 172 Subpart F.
F
Any quantity of hazardous material that requires placarding
Added in the 2000–2001 registration year. The transportation of any quantity of a hazardous material (other than Division 6.2 and Class 9) in bulk packaging requires placarding and therefore registration. This includes residues in unpurged tank trucks or rail tank cars — persons returning such packagings must register as offerors.
Category F is the most broadly applicable threshold. If your shipments require placards at all, you are likely required to register.
📌 Subsidiaries must register separately

The term "person" under the registration regulations includes corporations, partnerships, LLCs, and LPs. A separately incorporated subsidiary must register even when a parent company is also required to register. All locations and vehicles operated by a registered person are covered by that person's single registration.

Layer 3 — Exceptions

Who Is Exempt from Registration?

The following entities are specifically excepted from registration requirements by statute or regulation.

✓ Exempt from registration
  • Federal government agencies
  • State agencies and political subdivisions of states
  • Tribal governments and their employees acting in official capacity
  • Hazmat employees including owner-operators leased to a registered motor carrier under a 30-day or longer lease
  • Farmers shipping only hazardous materials in direct support of farming operations (below Categories A–E thresholds)
  • Canadian shippers (by reciprocity agreement) — Canadian carriers are still required to register
  • Foreign companies offering hazmat from outside the US into countries that do not impose reciprocal registration on US companies
✕ Not exempt — must register
  • Canadian carriers transporting hazmat in the US — must also designate a US Agent of Service
  • Farmers shipping hazmat above Category A–E thresholds or for non-farming commercial purposes
  • Non-US companies offering hazmat for transport to the US — must designate a US Agent of Service
  • Federal, state, or local government contractors performing the activities listed in Categories A–F
  • Merchant vessel carriers transporting hazmat within 12 miles of the US coast
  • Hazardous waste generators meeting the Category A–F thresholds
Layer 4 — Fees & registration year

2025–2026 Registration Fees and Timeline

Registration fees depend on business size (as defined by the SBA size standard for your NAICS code) and the registration period selected. All fees include a $25 processing fee. Multi-year registrations are available for up to three years.

Registration period Small business or non-profit All other businesses
2025–2026 (1 year: July 1, 2025 – June 30, 2026) $275 $2,600
2025–2027 (2 years: July 1, 2025 – June 30, 2027) $525 $5,175
2025–2028 (3 years: July 1, 2025 – June 30, 2028) $775 $7,750
May 1
Early registration opens
July 1
Registration year begins
June 30
Registration year ends
📌 How to determine your business size

Your business size is determined by the SBA size standard for your primary business activity (industry group) as identified by your NAICS code. The size standard is expressed either as number of employees or gross annual receipts, depending on the industry. Use the SBA table of size standards and the Census Bureau NAICS code lookup to confirm your classification before registering.

⚠ Do not submit before May 1

Registrations submitted before May 1 for the upcoming registration year will not be processed, which may cause delays and registration errors. The fee is not prorated — full payment is required regardless of when during the registration year you register. You must have your DOT certificate and registration number before you begin offering or transporting hazardous materials.

Layer 5 — How to register

How to Complete Your PHMSA Registration

Online registration through the PHMSA Portal is the fastest and most effective method. A registration number and printable certificate are issued immediately upon credit card payment. Mail-in registrations may take up to eight weeks to process.

1
Create or authenticate a Login.gov account
The PHMSA Portal requires multi-factor authentication through Login.gov. New users must create an account at Login.gov, confirm their email, set a password (minimum 12 characters), and set up phone-based authentication. Existing users sign in with Login.gov credentials before accessing the portal. For assistance: PortalSupport@dot.gov
2
Access the PHMSA Portal and select registration type
Navigate to portal.phmsa.dot.gov and select "HAZMAT REGISTRATION." Choose your registration type: Initial (first-time registrant), Renewal (use your existing HM Company ID to avoid errors), or Amendment (no additional fee — required within 30 days of a company name or address change).
3
Complete Form DOT F 5800.2
Enter your company name and principal place of business address (physical address required if mailing address is a P.O. Box), your DOT or MC/MX number if applicable, the modes of transport used, your NAICS code, SBA business size, and the registration period. Mark the hazmat activity categories (A–F) that applied during the prior calendar year and the states where those activities occurred.
4
Pay the registration fee
Online: pay by credit card (Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover) or ACH electronic check. Credit card payments generate an immediate certificate. ACH payments are confirmed the next business day. Do not resubmit if you do not receive immediate confirmation — contact the help desk first to avoid duplicate payments. Mail-in: check or money order payable to "U.S. Department of Transportation" sent to the PHMSA Portland lockbox.
5
Retain the certificate and registration number
Motor carriers must keep the current certificate on-board the vehicle at all times. All registrants must retain copies of the registration statement and certificate for three years, available for inspection upon request. Your HM Company ID appears on the certificate and should be used for all future renewals to avoid name and address errors.
📞 PHMSA Registration Help Desk

For registration questions, renewals, refunds, or portal issues: (202) 934-1630 for businesses A–M · (202) 934-1631 for businesses N–Z · Email: Register@dot.gov. For general hazmat regulations questions: infocntr@dot.gov or (800) 467-4922. For portal login issues: PortalSupport@dot.gov.

⚠ Avoid third-party registration services

PHMSA advises registrants to complete registration directly through the official PHMSA Portal at portal.phmsa.dot.gov. Third-party companies offering PHMSA hazmat registration services are not restricted but frequently add unnecessary fees on top of the registration payment. The PHMSA Portal is free to use and issues certificates immediately.

Layer 6 — Registration vs. compliance

PHMSA Registration vs. 49 CFR Part 172 Compliance

These are two separate and independent federal obligations. Many shippers are subject to both simultaneously — but confusing them is one of the most common compliance mistakes in the industry.

PHMSA Registration 49 CFR Part 172 Compliance
Governing regulation 49 CFR §§ 107.601–107.620 49 CFR Part 172, Subparts C–H
What it covers Annual fee registration of your company with PHMSA Compliance requirements for every individual shipment
Trigger Shipping above specific volume/quantity thresholds (Categories A–F) Offering any regulated hazmat for transport in commerce
Who it applies to Larger-volume shippers and transporters above thresholds Virtually every hazmat shipper, any quantity
Frequency Once per year (July 1–June 30) Every shipment, every mode, year-round
Produces DOT Certificate and registration number Compliant shipping papers, labels, placards, trained staff
24-hour emergency phone number required? No — this is a Part 172 requirement Yes — on every shipping paper under § 172.604
Penalty for non-compliance Penalties for failure to register or pay correct fee Up to $7,500 per violation per shipment
🔗 How the two obligations connect

If your shipments exceed the Category F threshold — any quantity requiring placarding — you are required to both register with PHMSA annually and maintain full 49 CFR Part 172 compliance on every shipment. Your registration certificate does not satisfy any Part 172 requirement. Conversely, many smaller-volume hazmat shippers who are fully required to comply with Part 172 (including the 24-hour emergency phone number) fall below all six registration thresholds and are not required to register. The two obligations exist on separate tracks.

Layer 7 — Special situations

Special Registration Situations

Several situations have specific registration requirements beyond the standard program.

Non-US companies
All non-US resident companies applying for a hazmat registration certificate must designate a permanent US resident as a US Agent of Service. The designated agent receives documents on behalf of the company and does not need to be affiliated with your business. Requirements are specified in 49 CFR § 105.40. See PHMSA international registration guidance.
Canadian carriers
Canadian shippers are exempt from PHMSA registration by reciprocity agreement. Canadian carriers domiciled outside the US who transport hazmat in the US are required to register with PHMSA and designate a US Agent of Service per 49 CFR §§ 107.606(a)(7) and 107.608.
Mergers and acquisitions
A registration certificate is not a company asset and cannot be sold or transferred as part of a business transaction. If corporate structure changes affect the registrant, contact PHMSA at Register@dot.gov before filing an amendment to determine the appropriate course of action.
Hazardous waste generators
All hazardous wastes subject to EPA Hazardous Waste Manifest Requirements are hazardous materials under the HMR. A hazardous waste generator must register if it meets the Category A–F thresholds — the same thresholds that apply to all other offerors and transporters.
Registered — but still need Part 172 compliance?
Once your PHMSA registration is filed, your next step is ensuring every shipment complies with 49 CFR Part 172 — including the 24-hour emergency phone number. Our team can confirm what applies to your operation and get you set up immediately.
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Layer 8 — Reference

Regulatory Reference Map — PHMSA Hazmat Registration

Every primary citation relevant to the PHMSA hazmat registration program, with links to official sources.

What it coversCitation / resource
Hazmat registration program — full requirements49 CFR §§ 107.601–107.620
Definitions used in the hazmat regulations49 CFR § 171.8
Class 7 highway route-controlled quantities49 CFR § 173.403
Division 1.1/1.2/1.3 explosives definitions49 CFR § 173.50
Hazard Zone A — gases (inhalation hazard)49 CFR § 173.116(a)
Hazard Zone A — liquids (inhalation hazard)49 CFR § 173.133(a)
US Designated Agent requirements49 CFR § 105.40
International registrant requirements49 CFR § 107.608
PHMSA online registration portalportal.phmsa.dot.gov
PHMSA registration overview and training videophmsa.dot.gov/registration
PHMSA 2025–2026 registration brochurePHMSA Registration Brochure
SBA table of size standards (for fee determination)SBA Size Standards
FMCSA DOT and MC/MX number lookupfmcsa.dot.gov
49 CFR Part 172 compliance — shipping papers, labels, placards, training, 24-hour emergency phone numberSee our Part 172 compliance guide →
Frequently asked questions

Common Questions About PHMSA Hazmat Registration

Registered with PHMSA? Now make every shipment compliant.

PHMSA registration gives you a certificate. Hazmat Line gives you the 24-hour emergency phone number that makes every individual shipment compliant with 49 CFR § 172.604 — with immediate setup and transparent annual pricing.

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