Carrier Setup Packets
A carrier setup packet is everything a freight broker needs from a new carrier before tendering them a load. Here's what goes inside the packet, how brokers used to send and chase them, and the modern way to skip the chase entirely.
What is a carrier setup packet?
A carrier setup packet is the bundle of paperwork, documents, and verifications a freight broker collects from a motor carrier before working with them. The same bundle goes by a few different names depending on who's talking — "carrier packet," "broker setup packet," "new-carrier paperwork," "carrier compliance file" — but they all describe the same thing: the legal and operational record a broker maintains so they can confidently tender freight to that carrier.
The setup packet is one piece of a larger workflow called carrier onboarding. The onboarding workflow is the full process — verifying authority, collecting documents, signing the agreement, activating the carrier in the TMS. The setup packet is specifically the document set that holds it all together. A complete setup packet is the artifact a broker can pull up in a claim, an audit, or a year-end review and say: "here's everything we collected before we ever tendered them a load."
What's inside a carrier setup packet
Every brokerage tunes their setup packet to their compliance posture, but the spine of a complete packet is consistent across the industry. These are the documents and data points that typically make up a US freight broker's setup packet for a new motor carrier.
Broker-Carrier Agreement
The contract. Payment terms, claims process, liability allocation, dispute resolution — all signed.
MC certificate
Proof of active FMCSA operating authority. Pulled from SAFER or supplied by the carrier.
COI bundle
Certificates of Insurance — auto liability, motor truck cargo, and general liability. Broker named as certificate holder.
W-9
Tax identification details so the broker can issue 1099s correctly at year end.
Notice of Assignment
Required when the carrier uses a factoring company. Directs payment to the factor, not the carrier.
Equipment / lane profile
Trailer types, services offered, operating geography. The data the broker's TMS needs to match the carrier to freight.
Dispatch contacts
Primary dispatcher name, email, phone, and after-hours contact. Where load offers and load-status calls actually go.
Authority-signer details
The person at the carrier authorized to bind the company — name, title, contact info, and a verified email.
Custom addenda
Anything else the broker needs — flatbed-specific safety form, hazmat addendum, equipment photo, ACH form, references.
The setup packet workflow: email-and-fax vs. one link
Brokerages still run setup packets through a Word doc and an email thread — and it works, sort of. The alternative is a single link the carrier completes in their cab on a phone. Both arrive at the same artifact (a signed packet). What differs is the broker's time, the carrier's completion rate, and the broker's exposure to fraud during the process.
Traditional Word doc + email
- Email the carrier a packet template — a PDF or Word doc with blank fields.
- Carrier prints, signs, fills in handwriting, scans, emails back.
- Broker opens the PDFs, eyeballs every page, looks for missing initials.
- Broker hops to FMCSA SAFER, copy-pastes the MC# to verify authority.
- Broker emails the carrier's insurance agent to confirm coverage.
- Broker re-types the carrier into the TMS — name, MC#, equipment, dispatcher, lane profile.
- Two to five business days later, the carrier is activated.
CarrierPacket.Link One link
- Broker designs the packet once — branding, required documents, custom agreement.
- Broker sends the carrier a single link (or embeds it on their site).
- Carrier completes the form on a phone or laptop in the cab.
- FMCSA authority + insurance + safety scores pulled automatically.
- Carrier signs via email-OTP — the click on the verification email is the signature.
- Webhook fires into the broker's TMS with the signed PDF, every document, and the risk verdict.
- Under an hour from "send link" to "ready to tender."
Run carrier setup as software, not a process
CarrierPacket.Link is a complete digital carrier setup platform — broker-branded, embeddable, with every document and verification built in. Brokers design a packet once, share it as a link, and get back signed and verified records that drop straight into the TMS. The carrier-facing experience is mobile-first and pre-fills FMCSA data the moment the carrier types their MC# or DOT#.
Every setup packet that comes back to a broker through CarrierPacket.Link runs through our five-layer verification stack: real-time FMCSA verification, a PASS / WARN / FAIL risk score from our SearchCarriers integration, email-OTP signing, an optional FMCSA-phone SMS claim for high-stakes packets, and an audit envelope baked into the signed PDF. The full breakdown of those layers lives on the Carrier Onboarding page — they protect every setup packet, automatically.
Try the modern setup packet
Spin up an account, design your first packet, brand it with your logo and colors, and send it to the next carrier on your list — all this afternoon. No credit card to start, no procurement cycle, no per-seat fees.
- 30 days free with the full feature set
- Brand the packet with your logo, colors, and your own agreement
- Real-time FMCSA verification + risk scoring on every submission
- Webhook + REST API + CSV — your TMS, your way
Frequently asked questions
What's the difference between a carrier setup packet and a digital carrier packet?
Do I have to use a standard template, or can I use my own?
How long does setting up a carrier actually take with CarrierPacket.Link?
What's the FMCSA verification on every packet?
Does the 30-day free trial include the full feature set?
Spin up your first setup packet today
Sign up, build the packet, send the link. 30 days free with the full feature set — no card required.
Start your free 30-day trial