Calculate driver available hours under FMCSA HOS rules. Track 11-hour drive limit, 14-hour window, 70-hour/8-day cycle, and required break compliance.
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) Hours of Service regulations limit how long commercial drivers can operate to prevent fatigue-related accidents. The core rules are: 11 hours of driving within a 14-hour on-duty window, a mandatory 30-minute break after 8 hours of driving, and a 70-hour limit over 8 consecutive days.
These regulations directly impact fleet capacity, route planning, and driver scheduling. Understanding exactly how many hours are available before a required rest period is critical for dispatchers managing loads and drivers planning their trips.
This calculator tracks a driver's HOS status based on hours already used. Enter drive time used, on-duty time, and cycle hours to see remaining availability under each rule. Use it for trip planning, load acceptance decisions, and HOS compliance verification.
Supply-chain managers, warehouse operators, and shipping coordinators rely on precise driver hours of service (hos) data to maintain efficiency and control costs across complex distribution networks. Revisit this calculator whenever conditions change to keep your logistics plans aligned with real-world performance.
HOS violations carry fines of $1,000-$16,000 per occurrence and can put drivers out of service. Beyond compliance, accurate HOS tracking maximizes productive drive time — a driver who knows exactly when breaks are required can plan stops efficiently rather than guessing. Real-time recalculation lets you model different scenarios quickly, ensuring your logistics decisions are backed by accurate, up-to-date numbers.
Drive Hours Remaining = 11 − Drive Hours Used Window Remaining = 14 − On-Duty Hours Used Cycle Remaining = 70 − Cycle Hours Used Effective Remaining = MIN(Drive Remaining, Window Remaining, Cycle Remaining) Break Required = Drive Hours Since Last Break ≥ 8
Result: Effective Drive Time Remaining = 4.5 hours
Drive remaining: 11 − 6.5 = 4.5 hrs. Window remaining: 14 − 9 = 5 hrs. Cycle remaining: 70 − 52 = 18 hrs. The most restrictive limit is the 11-hour drive rule at 4.5 hours. A 30-minute break is required before driving if 8+ hours since last break.
The key FMCSA HOS rules for property-carrying drivers are: 11 hours maximum driving after 10 hours off duty, 14-hour duty window (non-extendable), 30-minute break after 8 hours driving, 60/7 or 70/8-day rolling cycle limit, and optional 34-hour restart to reset the cycle.
HOS rules directly determine how far a driver can travel in one day. At 55 mph average, 11 hours of driving covers about 600 miles. Accounting for the 14-hour window, fueling, and breaks, realistic daily distance is 450-550 miles. Plan loads and routes around these practical limits.
Electronic Logging Devices (ELDs) automatically record driving time and duty status. They've largely eliminated paper logbook fraud but also removed flexibility. Dispatchers must work with ELD data in real-time to avoid assigning loads that would push drivers into violations.
After 10 consecutive hours off duty, a driver may drive a maximum of 11 hours. This is the primary driving limit. Once 11 hours of drive time are used, the driver must take 10 consecutive hours off duty before driving again.
A driver cannot drive past the 14th consecutive hour after coming on duty, even if they haven't used all 11 drive hours. The 14-hour clock runs continuously from when the driver first comes on duty and cannot be paused by off-duty time.
A driver cannot drive after being on duty 70 hours in any 8 consecutive day period. This is a rolling 8-day total. A 34-hour restart (off duty for 34+ consecutive hours) resets this cycle, allowing a fresh 70 hours.
A driver must take a 30-minute break after 8 cumulative hours of driving time since the last off-duty period of 30+ minutes. The break can be off-duty or on-duty not-driving (like fueling). It pauses the 8-hour driving clock.
Drivers face fines of $1,000-$16,000 per violation. Carriers face similar penalties plus potential out-of-service orders. Repeated violations affect safety ratings and can trigger audits. Modern ELDs make violations easy to detect and difficult to hide.
Yes. Drivers operating within a 150 air-mile radius who return to their starting point within 14 hours are exempt from the ELD mandate and the 30-minute break rule. They still must comply with the 11-hour drive and 14-hour window limits.