If you operate an interstate household goods moving company, federal law requires you to offer customers an arbitration option for resolving loss and damage claims. That program is what FMCSA arbitration refers to, and having a compliant one is tied to your operating authority.
Here’s what it means, who it applies to, and what a compliant program needs to include.
The Short Answer
An FMCSA arbitration program is a dispute resolution process that interstate household goods movers are required to make available to customers for loss and damage claims and carrier charge disputes. The requirement comes from 49 CFR 375.211, the federal regulation governing arbitration programs for household goods transportation.
The regulation doesn’t say you have to win every dispute. It says you have to offer a neutral process for resolving them.
Who Does This Apply To?
The requirement applies to interstate household goods movers, carriers that transport household goods across state lines. If your company moves customers between states, this applies to you.
It does not apply to:
- Purely intrastate movers (operating within a single state only)
- Freight carriers that don’t handle household goods
- Brokers who arrange moves but don’t physically transport goods
If you’re unsure whether you qualify as an interstate household goods mover under FMCSA’s definition, your operating authority registration will reflect this.
What the Requirement Actually Means
Under 49 CFR 375.211, covered movers must:
- Maintain an arbitration program covering loss and damage claims and carrier charge disputes
- Provide customers with a concise, easy-to-read written summary of the arbitration program
- Use an arbitration process that meets the 11 specific elements required by the regulation
- Participate in good faith when a customer initiates arbitration
The arbitration has to be a real process with a neutral decision-maker. An internal complaints process run by your own staff doesn’t satisfy the requirement.
What Happens Without a Compliant Program?
Running without a compliant FMCSA arbitration program creates regulatory exposure. Here’s where it shows up.
Customer complaints to FMCSA. When a customer can’t get a satisfactory resolution and looks up their rights, they find out you’re required to offer arbitration. If you can’t produce evidence of your program, that complaint gets more traction.
Audit risk. FMCSA compliance audits review whether carriers meet the requirements tied to their operating authority. An arbitration program is one of them.
Loss of credibility in disputes. If you end up in litigation over a claim, the absence of an arbitration program weakens your position. It’s evidence you weren’t meeting your obligations.
None of these outcomes are inevitable, but all of them become more likely without a program in place.
What a Compliant Program Looks Like
A compliant FMCSA arbitration program must include:
- A neutral, independent arbitrator (not a company employee)
- A documented process the customer can access and follow
- Coverage for loss, damage, and carrier charge disputes
- A written summary provided to customers, concise, easy to read, and accurate per 49 CFR 375.211
- Compliance with the 11 required program elements under 49 CFR 375.211
The program has to be offered in good faith. It can’t be structured in a way that makes it practically impossible for a customer to use.
A Quick Self-Assessment
If you’re not sure whether your current process qualifies, ask yourself:
- Do you have a written arbitration program with defined procedures?
- Is it administered by someone independent of your company?
- Do you provide written notice to customers before or at the time of a move?
- Are loss, damage, and delay claims covered?
- Can a customer actually initiate the process without going through you?
If any answer is “no” or “I’m not sure,” you have a gap.
The Practical Bottom Line
An FMCSA arbitration program isn’t about losing disputes. It’s about having a documented, neutral process that meets your regulatory obligations and protects your operating authority.
For most moving companies, the easiest path is a purpose-built platform. Brief is designed specifically for this. You can have your program and compliance documentation in place in a few minutes.