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What Are the Compliance Problems AI Can Solve for Work Truck Fleets Today? [Part 2]

AI can clarify HOS data, speed up audits, or create new risks. Here’s what it does well, where it struggles, and why humans still matter.

January 14, 2026
Illustration showing a human and an AI figure facing a connected digital AI network, representing how fleets balance automation and human oversight when using AI for compliance and audits.

As fleets turn to AI to manage HOS data, audits, and documentation at scale, understanding where automation helps (and where human judgment is still required) becomes critical to defensible compliance.

Credit: Work Truck 

4 min to read


AI does not interpret regulations or apply legal judgment. What it does well is handle scale, speed, and consistency in areas where human teams are increasingly overwhelmed.

“AI can add operational context to HOS data, distinguishing road travel from yard moves or jobsite repositioning, so fleets can convert logs into defensible compliance evidence without drowning in manual reconciliation," said Adam Kahn, chief marketing officer at Netradyne.

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That distinction matters because ELDs record movement, not context.

“Edge AI enables end users to validate true driving behavior versus yard moves or job-site repositioning by applying video-based context,” Kahn said.

How to Turn Raw Data into Defensible Compliance Evidence

Mark Schedler, senior editor at J. J. Keller and Associates, Inc., outlined several compliance workflows where AI is already reducing risk and manual workload.

Unassigned driving time is one of the most persistent challenges. AI can match unidentified driving events to drivers who likely generated them, significantly reducing manual processing. Drivers must still accept legitimate events when they log into the ELD, but the heavy lifting is automated.

AI also strengthens falsification detection.

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“Other potential falsification areas can be more closely monitored, such as unplugging ELDs, improper edits, misuse of yard moves, and personal conveyance,” Schedler said. AI can also flag ghost-driver use and uncertified logs kept open to manipulate hours toward the end of a work week, rather than certifying and submitting logs daily.

Expiring records are another major compliance risk.

“AI sends reminders for CDL, medical certifications, and annual reviews,” Schedler said.

During onboarding, AI-driven dashboards can show which Driver Qualification File documents are still missing before a driver operates a CMV. These prompts may automatically send emails or texts to prospective drivers or trigger follow-up calls, reducing compliance gaps and shortening hiring timelines.

Beyond HOS and log management, AI is also reshaping how fleets manage compliance documentation at scale.

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AI Can Sound Confident (and Still Be Wrong)

AI can process massive amounts of data quickly, but confidence does not equal correctness.

Some AI tools, particularly generative systems, may “hallucinate” or overgeneralize when answering regulatory questions. Others may misinterpret FMCSA rules, exemptions, or state-level requirements while sounding authoritative.

That’s why verification matters.

AI should surface patterns, flag anomalies, and organize evidence, not replace regulatory expertise. Fleets still need knowledgeable personnel to validate AI outputs, primarily when decisions affect audits, enforcement, or legal exposure.

In compliance, explainability isn’t optional. It’s protection.

Understanding AI and Documentation at Scale

From Naeem Bari's perspective, co-founder and president of Linxup, the biggest value of AI today is speed.

“The biggest challenge AI helps with today is collecting, organizing, and analyzing large amounts of data quickly enough to spot patterns before they become violations,” he said.

AI also plays a role in managing documentation and recordkeeping, including licenses, insurance documents, inspection records, and maintenance activity. Predictive maintenance is another emerging benefit, with AI flagging potential failures before they occur.

“AI helps fleets move from reactive compliance to proactive risk management,” Bari said.

Eric Lambert, VP legal and employment counsel specializing in transportation and logistics at Trimble, framed the value in terms of workload relief.

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“AI solutions are currently most effective at solving ‘volume and velocity’ challenges facing human compliance teams,” he said. “AI can automate high-volume, high-velocity tasks to reduce risk and allow the human compliance team to focus their scarce resources on judgment, reasoning, and decision-making.”

Real-World Examples Fleets Can Recognize

Kahn shared a simple but telling example:

“Footage confirms a vehicle was stationary within a yard, engine running, but with no driving behavior, no lane movement, no roadway context, and no traffic interaction,” he noted.

That video context can make the difference between a clean audit and a long explanation.

Lambert pointed to AI-driven HOS log audits that analyze 100% of a fleet’s data.

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“AI-driven platforms can quickly and effectively analyze 100% of a fleet’s HOS data, cross-referencing it against other data streams such as GPS records, fuel card transactions, and vehicle telematics,” he said.

That approach allows fleets to proactively identify and correct compliance issues before they surface during a DOT audit.

Schedler added an important caution.

“AI reads forms and enters data into systems, cutting manual work,” he said. “But accuracy must be verified.”

Handwritten applications and inconsistent MVR formats still require spot audits. Missed violations can lead to negligent-hiring claims, underscoring the need for human oversight.

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Understanding what AI can and cannot solve today is the difference between faster compliance and false confidence. In Part 3, we’ll look at how fleets can use AI to improve compliance without increasing risk and what to ask before buying into any solution. And if you missed Part 1, we break down why AI adoption remains uneven across work truck fleets.

Where AI Still Needs Humans in the Loop

AI delivers real value, but it has limits fleets need to understand. AI can struggle with:

  • Unusual site layouts or jobsite environments

  • Atypical weather conditions

  • Non-standard driving behaviors

  • Regulatory exemptions such as short-haul, agricultural, or intrastate operations

  • State-level regulatory differences

“The right role for AI in compliance is explainable detection and acceleration. It should surface patterns and organize evidence (and make it clear why an event was flagged) while regulatory judgment remains with trained personnel," said Adam Kahn, chief marketing officer at Netradyne. 

The most effective fleets treat AI as a validation and acceleration tool, not a final decision-maker.

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