---
title: "How to Check If Your BMC-85 Trustee Is Still FMCSA-Compliant"
description: "Learn how to verify your BMC-85 trustee against the updated FMCSA eligibility list. Loan and finance companies are no longer eligible as of January 2026."
date: 2026-03-07
category: Compliance
author: "Cipher & Row"
read_time: "8 min read"
canonical: https://www.cipherandrow.com/blog/bmc-85-trustee-fmcsa-compliant
schema: Article
---

# How to Check If Your BMC-85 Trustee Is Still FMCSA-Compliant

> The 2026 FMCSA rule eliminated loan and finance companies as eligible BMC-85 trustees. Here is a step-by-step guide to verify your trustee and transition if needed.

## Why BMC-85 Trustee Eligibility Changed in 2026

As part of the [2026 broker financial responsibility rule](/blog/fmcsa-broker-financial-responsibility-rule-2026), the FMCSA significantly tightened the requirements for institutions that can serve as BMC-85 trustees. The goal was to ensure that trust fund assets are held by financially stable, federally regulated institutions with adequate depositor protections.

Before January 16, 2026, a wide range of financial entities could serve as trustees, including loan companies, finance companies, and non-bank financial institutions. That is no longer the case.

> Cipher & Row offers a free FMCSA checker tool that lets you verify any broker's trust fund status in seconds. No signup required. Enter a DOT or MC number and get instant results.

## Which Institutions Are Still Eligible

Under the updated rule, only the following types of institutions qualify as BMC-85 trustees:

- **FDIC-insured banks:** Commercial banks and savings institutions that carry Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation coverage. You can verify FDIC insurance status using the FDIC BankFind tool.
- **NCUA-insured credit unions:** Credit unions insured by the National Credit Union Administration. Verify coverage through the NCUA's credit union locator.
- **State-chartered institutions:** Banks and trust companies chartered by a U.S. state that meet minimum capital requirements specified in the rule. These institutions must also carry federal or state deposit insurance.

## Which Institutions Are No Longer Eligible

The following entity types can no longer serve as BMC-85 trustees as of January 16, 2026:

- Loan companies and consumer finance companies
- Non-bank financial services firms
- Uninsured or privately insured financial institutions
- Entities that do not meet the minimum capital requirements under the updated rule

If your current trustee falls into any of these categories, you must transition to an eligible institution within the compliance window.

## Step-by-Step: How to Verify Your Current Trustee

Follow this process to determine whether your BMC-85 trustee meets the updated eligibility requirements:

- **Step 1:** Identify your current trustee. Check your BMC-85 trust fund agreement or contact your trustee directly to confirm the institution's full legal name and charter type.
- **Step 2:** Check FDIC insurance. Visit the FDIC BankFind tool and search for your trustee by name. If the institution appears with active FDIC coverage, it qualifies under the bank category.
- **Step 3:** Check NCUA insurance. If your trustee is a credit union, use the NCUA credit union locator to confirm active insurance coverage.
- **Step 4:** Verify state charter status. For state-chartered institutions, contact your state banking regulator to confirm the institution's charter status and capital adequacy.
- **Step 5:** Confirm with the FMCSA. Cross-reference your findings with the FMCSA's updated list of eligible trustee types. If your trustee does not appear in any qualifying category, begin the transition process immediately.

## The 30-Day Compliance Window

If your current trustee is no longer eligible, you have 30 days from the rule's effective date (January 16, 2026) to transition to a qualifying institution. This timeline is tight, especially given the volume of brokers who need to make the same transition simultaneously.

During the transition, you must:

- Identify and establish a relationship with an eligible trustee
- Execute a new BMC-85 trust fund agreement with the new institution
- Transfer the full trust fund balance to the new trustee
- File the updated BMC-85 with the FMCSA
- Confirm that the FMCSA has processed and accepted the new filing

## What Happens If You Miss the Deadline

Failure to transition to an eligible trustee within the compliance window can result in immediate suspension of your broker operating authority. Under the updated enforcement provisions, the FMCSA does not provide an additional grace period for trustee eligibility violations.

If your authority is suspended, you must cease all brokerage operations immediately. Reinstating suspended authority requires demonstrating compliance with all current requirements, including maintaining an eligible trustee and a fully funded trust account.

## Best Practices for Ongoing Trustee Monitoring

Verifying your trustee once is not enough. Financial institutions can lose their FDIC or NCUA insurance, fail to meet capital requirements, or change their charter status. Ongoing monitoring ensures you catch these changes before they affect your compliance status.

- **Quarterly verification:** Check your trustee's insurance and charter status at least once per quarter.
- **Automated alerts:** Use compliance monitoring tools to receive notifications about changes to your trustee's regulatory status.
- **Backup planning:** Maintain a relationship with at least one alternative eligible trustee so you can transition quickly if needed.

## How Cipher & Row Monitors Trustee Compliance

Cipher & Row's compliance platform continuously monitors your BMC-85 trustee's eligibility status against FMCSA, FDIC, and NCUA databases. If your trustee's status changes, you receive an immediate alert with recommended next steps, giving you time to transition before your operating authority is affected.
