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Truck Parking Benefits Information Collection Survey

Favicon for www.regulations.gov Regs.gov: Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
Published April 6th, 2026
Detected April 7th, 2026
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Summary

FMCSA published a notice seeking comments on a proposed information collection titled 'Quantifying the Benefits of Creating New Truck Parking Spaces.' The agency will survey approximately 1,000 commercial truck drivers about parking habits to estimate monetary benefits of new truck parking spaces. The 60-day Federal Register notice received eight comments; this 30-day review period closes May 6, 2026.

What changed

FMCSA is requesting OMB approval for a new information collection survey targeting commercial truck drivers to quantify the economic benefits of creating new truck parking spaces. The survey will collect data on unauthorized parking frequency, early stops to secure parking spaces, route deviations to find parking, and potential hours-of-service violations caused by parking shortages. With an estimated 1,000 respondents at 25 minutes each, the total annual burden is 416 hours.

Commercial trucking operators and drivers may wish to monitor FMCSA-2025-0787 and consider submitting comments by May 6, 2026 if they have relevant operational experience with parking challenges. This research will inform State and local transportation planning decisions regarding truck parking infrastructure investments.

Source document (simplified)

Content

ACTION:

Notice and request for comments.

SUMMARY:

In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, FMCSA announces its plan to submit the Information Collection Request
(ICR) described below to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval. This notice invites comments on
a proposed information collection titled Quantifying the Benefits of Creating New Truck Parking Spaces. This research study will collect approximately 1,000 survey responses from truck drivers about their experiences with finding
truck parking spaces to estimate the monetary benefits of creating new truck parking spaces. Eight public comments were received
in response to the 60-day
Federal Register
notice.

DATES:

Comments on this notice must be received on or before May 6, 2026.

ADDRESSES:

Written comments and recommendations for the proposed information collection should be submitted within 30 days of publication
of this notice to www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain. Find this information collection by selecting “Currently under 30-day Review—Open for Public Comments” or by using the search
function.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

Dan Britton, Office of Research and Registration, FMCSA, W58-213, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590-0001; (202)
366-9980; dan.britton@dot.gov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Title: Quantifying the Benefits of Creating New Truck Parking Spaces.

OMB Control Number: 2126-TBD.

Type of Request: New ICR.

Respondents: Commercial truck drivers.

Estimated Number of Respondents: 1,000.

Estimated Time per Response: 25 minutes.

Expiration Date: N/A. This is a new ICR.

Frequency of Response: Each survey participant will provide only one survey response.

Estimated Total Annual Burden: 416 hours (0.416 hours per response × 1,000 respondents).

Background

The nationwide shortage of truck parking spaces is a significant source of frustration for truck drivers, increasing expenses
for the trucking industry and decreasing t safety for all road users. The American Transportation Research Institute conducts
an annual survey of trucking industry stakeholders (Critical Issues in the Trucking Industry), and the 2024 survey found that, for the second year in a row, the lack of available truck parking was the second highest
industry concern overall, and the number one concern among truck drivers. The lack of truck parking often forces truck drivers
to choose between violating federal hours-of-service laws and using unsafe, illegal parking spaces.

Many government, safety, and industry organizations are working to create more truck parking spaces, but there is a lack of
research on the actual precise monetary benefits of new truck parking spaces. These benefits include decreasing carriers'
costs, increasing drivers' well-being, and reducing the number of crashes. To help State and local policymakers make informed
decisions about the construction of truck parking spaces, FMCSA is conducting a research study, titled Quantifying the Benefits of Creating New Truck Parking Spaces, which will survey truck drivers about their parking habits and experiences, gaining the exact information needed to quantify
the benefits of new truck parking spaces.

Although researchers have conducted many other surveys on truck parking, none have reliably estimated the statistics needed,
including how often and how long truck drivers (a) park in unauthorized spaces, (b) stop driving early to obtain a parking
space, (c) drive off their routes to find parking, and (d) drive past hours-of-service limits to find parking. The results
of this survey will be combined with related research to produce estimates of the benefits of creating new truck parking spaces
in different areas, which could be beneficial to the many government and private organizations that decide where to build
new truck parking spaces.

The main objective of this project is to estimate the benefits of new truck parking spaces, but the project will also answer
four related research questions:

  1. How many trucks are parked in authorized and unauthorized areas per day, on average? In other words, how large is the nationwide
    shortage of truck parking spaces?

  2. What are the most cost-effective methods for increasing truck parking capacity?

  3. Which truck parking information management systems are used most often and are most effective?

  4. What percentage of drivers routinely make reservations, pay for parking, or use various other truck parking services?

Several thousand truck drivers, from a wide range of sectors, will be asked to complete the 25-minute online survey, with
a goal of obtaining approximately 1,000 complete responses.

Title 23, United States Code (U.S.C.), Chapter 4, Section 403 authorizes the Secretary to use funds appropriated to carry
out this section to conduct research and development activities, including demonstration projects and the collection and analysis
of highway and motor vehicle safety data and related information with respect to all aspects of highway and traffic safety
systems and conditions relating to vehicle, highway, driver, passenger, motorcyclist, bicyclist, and pedestrian characteristics;
accident causation and investigations; and human behavioral factors and their effect on highway and traffic safety, including
driver education, impaired driving and distracted driving; and research on, evaluations of, and identification of best practices
related to driver education programs (including driver education curricula, instructor training and certification, program
administration, and delivery mechanisms) and make recommendations for harmonizing driver education and multistage graduated
licensing systems; and the effect of State laws on any aspects, activities, or programs described in subparagraphs (A) through
(E) (see 23 U.S.C. 403(b)(1)(A)(i)-(ii), 23 U.S.C. 403(b)(1)(B)(i)-(iii), 23 U.S.C. 403(b)(1)(E), 23 U.S.C. 403(b)(1)(F)).

FMCSA published a notice in the
Federal Register
with a 60-day public comment period to announce this proposed information collection on November 28, 2025 (90 FR 54850). A
total of eight comments were received from the public. Five of the comments were from truck drivers (one of whom created a
truck parking business), two were from industry organizations (American Trucking Associations and Truckload Carriers Association),
and one was from a private company (Samsara). Each commenter agreed that truck parking is a significant issue for the commercial
trucking industry. Seven of the eight commenters were supportive of the study, while one commenter (an anonymous truck driver)
was skeptical of government involvement in truck parking and preferred to let private truck stop companies solve the truck
parking shortage entirely.

Anthony Peetz and an anonymous commenter mentioned how the truck parking situation has changed over the past several decades
and provided examples of how the trucking industry's needs have surpassed what infrastructure and the private sector are currently
able to provide. Anthony Peetz and the American Trucking Associations mentioned the growth in paid parking spaces and the
frustration truck drivers often feel when their only options are paid spaces and unauthorized spaces. FMCSA's study will focus
on the benefits of truck parking spaces in general and does not intend to assess the advantages and disadvantages of paid
and free spaces.

The American Trucking Associations, Samsara, and an anonymous commenter mentioned costs associated with the lack of truck
parking spaces, including carrier operating costs, crashes involving trucks parked in unauthorized spaces, and driver well-being.
FMCSA is including all of the costs mentioned by commenters in the study, as well as others not mentioned in the comments
(such as the costs of travel that occurs

  when a driver goes off his/her main route to search for parking).

Samsara mentioned the potential for telematics data to be helpful. FMCSA agrees and is indeed considering utilizing telematics
data for the study.

The American Trucking Associations and Gary D. Terhune mentioned the facilities that are sometimes available at truck parking
locations (restrooms, trash cans, vending machines, etc.). FMCSA agrees that those amenities are important, but estimating
their benefits would be beyond the scope of this study.

Public Comments Invited: You are asked to comment on any aspect of this information collection, including: (1) whether the proposed collection is necessary
for the performance of FMCSA's functions; (2) the accuracy of the estimated burden; (3) ways for FMCSA to enhance the quality,
usefulness, and clarity of the collected information; and (4) ways that the burden could be minimized without reducing the
quality of the collected information.

Issued under the authority of 49 CFR 1.87.

David M. Sutula, Acting Associate Administrator, Office of Research and Registration. [FR Doc. 2026-06597 Filed 4-3-26; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4910-EX-P

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Named provisions

Quantifying the Benefits of Creating New Truck Parking Spaces Information Collection Request

Classification

Agency
FMCSA
Published
April 6th, 2026
Comment period closes
May 6th, 2026 (29 days)
Instrument
Consultation
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Consultation
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
FMCSA-2025-0787-0010
Docket
FMCSA-2025-0787

Who this affects

Applies to
Transportation companies Truck drivers
Industry sector
4841 Trucking & Logistics
Activity scope
Trucking operations Transportation research
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Transportation
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Road Safety Infrastructure Planning

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