Verifying a US carrier is one search: FMCSA, keyed to a DOT number. Verifying a Canadian carrier is a different job, because Canada has no federal carrier registry. Safety oversight belongs to the provinces, and each one publishes its records its own way, on its own schedule, sometimes in French. That is why most vetting guides go quiet the moment the truck has an Ontario or Quebec plate. This one does not. Below is the checklist we run at Cipher & Row, written so you can follow it manually if you want to, with an honest note about what each step catches.
Key takeaways
- There is no Canadian FMCSA. Verification starts with the carrier's base province: Ontario's CVOR record through the MTO, Quebec's CTQ safety rating, British Columbia's NSC bulletin, Manitoba's registry.
- A carrier can be prohibited from operating by its home province while still showing an active, clean-looking US profile. Check both sides or you have checked neither.
- Insurance certificates should be confirmed with the insurer or its broker of record, not accepted from the carrier's email attachment.
- Every check you run is worth nothing later unless you kept a record of it. Seal the evidence, do not screenshot it.
- The free lookup at cipherandrow.com/verify runs the provincial, federal, and cross-border layers in one search, no signup.
The most expensive Canadian carrier to onboard is the one that passed a US-only check.
Step 1: Confirm the company actually exists
Start before the safety data. Get the carrier's exact legal name, operating name, and physical address, and make sure they match across the documents the carrier gave you. Under Canada's National Safety Code, a carrier is registered by its base province and holds a safety fitness certificate from that province, so the company's own paperwork should name the province you are about to check. A mismatch here, a Brampton address with an Alberta certificate and a Montreal phone number, is not automatically fraud, but it is the first thread reincarnated carriers leave hanging. If the entity looks freshly created and its principals trace back to an operation that lost its authority, you are looking at a chameleon carrier, and the rest of the checklist will come back clean precisely because the record is new.
Step 2: Check the home province's safety record
This is the step US-built tools skip, and it is the one that matters most. Where you look depends on where the carrier is based.
Ontario. Commercial operators need a CVOR certificate from the Ministry of Transportation, and the MTO publishes a rated carrier list. A carrier can also order its own CVOR abstract, so asking a prospective partner to produce a recent one is a fair request. Cipher & Row reads the MTO rated carrier list daily.
Quebec. The Commission des transports du Quebec assigns safety ratings under Quebec law, in French. The rating you never want to see is insatisfaisant: that carrier has lost the right to operate under provincial law, whatever its US profile says. We read the CTQ safety watch list weekly.
British Columbia. BC administers the National Safety Code provincially and publishes carrier updates in a periodic bulletin, which we ingest monthly.
Manitoba. Manitoba's registry answers direct queries, so it gets checked per lookup.
Everywhere else. Alberta, Saskatchewan, the Atlantic provinces, and the territories publish less, and we handle them on request rather than pretending to continuous coverage. Be suspicious of any vendor who claims complete real-time coverage of all thirteen provinces and territories; ask them to name the registry that supposedly provides it. And one honesty note that cuts against us too: a carrier that has never appeared on Ontario's or Quebec's published lists falls back to federal and cross-border checks, which still catch authority and insurance problems but are not full provincial depth. For what each acronym actually means, see our CVOR, NSC, and CTQ explainer.
Step 3: If the freight crosses the border, pull the US side too
A Canadian carrier running US lanes holds a USDOT number and, for for-hire work, US operating authority, which means it has a second regulatory record that can carry the disqualifying problem. Out-of-service orders, revoked authority, lapsed US insurance filings, none of that appears in any provincial registry, and no provincial problem appears in FMCSA. Check both and reconcile the identities: same legal name, same principals, same address on both sides. This is where a single merged lookup earns its keep, because reconciling two half-answers by hand is exactly where mistakes live. The full argument is in our cross-border verification guide.
Step 4: Verify insurance with the insurer, not the attachment
The certificate of insurance a carrier emails you is a claim, not a fact. Certificates get edited, dates get stretched, and one live policy number gets shared across several paper carriers. Confirm coverage with the issuing insurer or its broker of record, and confirm the policy is active today, not just that a PDF says it was active when the PDF was made. If you are processing packets at volume, this is the step our Packet Scanner automates: it extracts the policy fields, pins each one to the page it came from, and cross-checks them against registry data on both sides of the border, flagging lapsed coverage and shared policy numbers with evidence attached.
Step 5: Screen for sanctions and fraud signals
Two minutes, and it protects you from problems insurance never will. Screen the company and its principals against OFAC, UN, and Canadian sanctions lists. Then look at the fraud signals that individual documents cannot show you: authority that was re-issued recently after a revocation, identity details correlated across multiple carrier records, rates that are too good against the lane average. Every Cipher & Row lookup runs these screens automatically and folds them into a 0 to 100 trust score with a PROCEED, CAUTION, or BLOCK recommendation and the itemized reasons behind it.
Step 6: Keep a record you can show someone
Eighteen months from now, if a load goes wrong, the question will not be whether you checked the carrier. It will be whether you can prove what you saw when you checked. A screenshot in a shared drive is weak evidence; registries change and screenshots are editable. Reviewed verifications in Cipher & Row seal into a tamper-evident record with a public verify link, so a shipper, insurer, or auditor can confirm the check happened, and what it showed, without a Cipher & Row account. That is a verifiable record of the diligence you performed, which is what the person across the table actually asks for.
The red flags that should end the conversation
- A Quebec carrier rated insatisfaisant, or an Ontario operator that cannot produce a recent CVOR abstract.
- Legal name, address, or principal names that do not match between the provincial record, the US record, and the carrier's own paperwork.
- Authority that is weeks old while the equipment, drivers, and shipper references are suspiciously mature.
- An insurance certificate the insurer's broker of record cannot confirm, or a policy number that appears on another carrier's certificate.
- Pressure to skip verification because the truck is already rolling. Fraudulent operators manufacture urgency; real carriers expect to be checked.
Running the checklist: by hand or in one lookup
Everything above can be done manually. It takes registry accounts, some French, and a tolerance for provincial websites, and it goes stale the day after you do it, because a rating that changes next week is invisible until you check again. The alternative is one search: the free lookup at cipherandrow.com/verify runs the provincial, federal, and cross-border layers together, no signup, no card. Paid plans add continuous monitoring of the carriers you save, so the rating change finds you instead of waiting to be found: dispatchers from $49 per month with 500 lookup credits, brokerages from $149 with 250 credits, and a free registry tier for carriers. Details on the pricing page.
Quick answers
How do I verify a Canadian trucking company? Confirm the legal identity, check the base province's safety record (CVOR in Ontario, CTQ rating in Quebec, NSC records in BC, Manitoba's registry), pull FMCSA data if the carrier runs US lanes, confirm insurance with the insurer, screen sanctions lists, and keep a sealed record of what you found.
What is a CVOR number? Ontario's Commercial Vehicle Operator's Registration, issued by the MTO. It tracks an operator's collisions, convictions, and inspections in Ontario. Carriers can order their own CVOR abstract, and asking a prospective partner for a recent one is standard practice.
How do I check a Quebec carrier? Through the Commission des transports du Quebec's published safety information, which is in French. A rating of insatisfaisant means the carrier has lost the right to operate. Cipher & Row reads the CTQ safety watch list weekly so a lookup surfaces it in English.
Do Canadian carriers have DOT numbers? Only if they operate in the United States. A Canadian carrier running US lanes holds a USDOT number and appears in FMCSA data, which is why cross-border carriers need both sides checked.
Is any of this free? Yes. The lookup at cipherandrow.com/verify is free with no signup, and it covers US and Canadian carriers and brokers.