Hazmat Placarding Requirements for Truck Shipments in Florida

Understanding Hazmat Placarding for Florida Trucking

Proper placarding is one of the most visible and critical elements of hazardous materials transport. Placards communicate the type of hazard on a vehicle to emergency responders, other motorists, and law enforcement. Getting placarding wrong can result in hefty fines, shipment delays, and most importantly, compromised safety during an incident.

When Placards Are Required

The general rule requires placards when a vehicle carries 1,001 pounds or more of a single hazard class. However, certain materials in the DOT’s Table 1 — including explosives, poison gas, and radioactive materials — require placarding at any quantity. Understanding these thresholds is essential for every shipment your carrier handles.

Placard Types by Hazard Class

Each hazard class has a specific placard design with designated colors and symbols. Class 1 uses orange for explosives, Class 2 uses red for flammable gas and green for non-flammable gas, Class 3 uses red for flammable liquids, Class 4 uses red-and-white stripes for flammable solids, Class 5 uses yellow for oxidizers, Class 6 uses white for toxic substances, Class 7 uses yellow-and-white for radioactive, Class 8 uses black-and-white for corrosives, and Class 9 uses white with black stripes for miscellaneous hazards.

Placard Placement Rules

Placards must be displayed on all four sides of the vehicle — front, back, and both sides. They must be at least 250mm square, clearly visible and not obscured by ladders, doors, or other equipment. The placard must be securely attached and maintained in readable condition throughout transport. Go Freight’s fleet maintains compliant placard holders on all hazmat-equipped vehicles.

Mixed Load Placarding

When a vehicle carries multiple hazard classes, the placarding rules become more complex. Generally, each hazard class exceeding the threshold quantity gets its own placard, or a DANGEROUS placard can replace individual placards in certain situations. However, the DANGEROUS placard cannot be used for Table 1 materials, and some combinations are prohibited altogether.

Florida-Specific Enforcement

Florida Highway Patrol and FMCSA inspectors actively enforce hazmat placarding requirements on Florida highways. Violations can result in fines, out-of-service orders, and CSA points against the carrier’s safety record. Go Freight maintains a spotless compliance record through rigorous driver training and pre-trip inspection protocols.

Compliant Hazmat Transport

Need a carrier who gets placarding right every time? Go Freight’s hazmat team ensures full DOT compliance for all dangerous goods shipments.

Get a Free Quote | Call 786-445-0150

keyboard_arrow_up