Long-haul CDL drivers who travel outside of 100 air miles are required to take a 30-minute rest every eight hours and to log all of their activity during a 24-hour time frame. This includes everything from driving time, to fueling, to time spent sleeping.
DOT-regulated trucking or transportation businesses that operate primarily in a local jurisdiction qualify for the 100/150 Air Mile Radius Exemption. Our downloadable 100-Mile Radius Timesheet will help you track your miles in order to claim the exemption.
What Is An Air Mile?
An “air mile” is a nautical measurement of distance that excludes any twists or turns. If you’ve ever heard the phrase “as the crow flies”, this is describing an air mile. If your headquarters is located at Point A, an air mile is the distance you would travel in a straight line to Point B.
Who Needs the 100-Mile Timesheet?
The 100 air mile exemption is for CDL drivers who:
- Operate within 100 air miles
- Go off duty within 12 hours
- Report back to the same work location every day
- Have at least 10 consecutive hours off before starting their next on-duty period
Stay compliant with this printable DOT hours of service record (driver timesheet) for operations within a 100-air-mile radius of the driver’s normal work reporting location.
Download our FREE 100-Mile Driver Timesheet to ensure you are properly tracking and reporting driver time.