The federally-required training every supervisor of CDL drivers must have — done online, on your schedule, with an audit-ready certificate the moment you finish.
Before a company can send a driver for a reasonable-suspicion test, it must have a trained supervisor. This is that training.
Stay compliant and protect your company from liability with documented, trained supervisors.
Anyone who may observe a driver and decide whether to test needs this one-time training.
Running your own authority? You need a trained supervisor on file — that can be you.
Plain-English training built around the four indicator categories the regulation requires — physical, behavioral, speech, and performance.
Why it's required, the six DOT test types, and your responsibility as the trigger point.
The DOT 5-panel and the physical, behavioral, speech, and performance signs of drug use.
The 0.04 standard, the 4- and 8-hour rules, and how to spot alcohol impairment.
Specific, contemporaneous, articulable — and exactly what to do the moment you suspect impairment.
Writing a determination that holds up, the testing process, and return-to-duty.
Pass the exam and your certificate issues automatically.
The instant you pass the final exam, you get a dated certificate of completion — citing 49 CFR § 382.603 — ready to download, print, and keep on file for any audit.
Pay $39.99 and get instant access to your portal login.
Work through 6 modules at your own pace, on any device.
Score 80% on the final exam — unlimited retakes.
Download your certificate immediately.
Yes. The course is built to satisfy 49 CFR § 382.603 — at least 60 minutes on alcohol misuse and 60 minutes on controlled substances, covering the physical, behavioral, speech, and performance indicators.
About two hours. It's self-paced, so you can stop and resume anytime from your portal.
Yes — a dated certificate of completion issues automatically when you pass the final exam. Keep it on file as proof of training.
The federal rule requires the training one time. Many companies refresh periodically as a best practice.
Any supervisor who could observe a CDL driver and decide whether to order a reasonable-suspicion test — owners, safety managers, dispatchers, and owner-operators.
Reasonable Suspicion Supervisor Training · meets 49 CFR § 382.603