Learn More! Is Your Truck Fleet Truly Safe?
Fleet Safety: What Every Fleet Manager Needs to Know
Keeping driver and third parties safe and reducing the risk of physical damage is grounded in some very basic concepts.

The easiest, most effective way to keep drivers safe is instituting a formal written policy that requires all drivers and passengers to wear seat belts at all times.
Photo: Bobit
Fleet safety involves a number of often-complex processes: screening drivers, safety training, reward/penalty programs, and capturing and tracking data.
The following are some basic items that form the foundation of a fleet safety program:
Proper Licensing. Most fleets, screen new hire driving records, but, some don’t follow up. Review the driving records for all employees assigned or authorized to drive company-provided vehicles.
Seat Belt Policy. The easiest, most effective way to keep drivers safe is instituting a formal written policy that requires all drivers and passengers to wear seat belts at all times. Enforce the policy using surveys and spot checks. Make certain that there are consequences for not following the policy.
Vehicle Selection/Specification. Put the right vehicles with the right equipment into service. Vehicles that are too small, underpowered, or under-equipped can decrease acceleration and increase stopping distances, creating dangerous situations. Improper load-carrying capacity can reduce visibility with similar risks.
Enforce Policy Across the Board. “But he/she’s our best sales rep!” How often have fleet managers heard that response when enforcing consequences for unsafe driving? Once an exception is made, other requests will follow based upon the driver’s job performance or, in some cases, position in the company. Secure senior management approval for your fleet safety policy and enforce it without exception.
Keep Vehicles Properly Maintained. Maintain vehicles according to your preventive maintenance schedule and track compliance via exception reports, if possible, and regular condition reports. Safety-related maintenance and repair on equipment such as tires and brakes is critical in reducing the risk of damage and/or injury. Request that the driver’s immediate supervisor sign off on condition reports, and implement a follow-up procedure to make sure that dangerous conditions are dealt with promptly.
Territories. Drivers must be familiar with their territories, a particular issue in companies with high driver turnover. Drivers unfamiliar with the territory will often be distracted, trying to follow written directions or read maps when they should be concentrating on safe driving.
Preventability, Not Fault. Often a driver’s first reaction, when involved in an accident, is “but it wasn’t my fault!” The issue should not be at fault; but preventability. Thoroughly train drivers in defensive driving techniques. They should know that in every circumstance, they will be judged not on whether the accident was their fault, but whether they did everything possible to avoid the accident.
Using these simple basics, fleet managers can then build an effective fleet safety policy, which in turn will reduce the number of accidents and keep their drivers, and the public at large, safe.
More Safety
How Better Visibility Cut Speeding Violations by 48%
Fleet leaders don't need more data, they need clearer visibility into what the data is saying. This case study explores how one utility replaced speeding-event counts with a single metric — miles driven in violation — to strengthen safety and significantly reduce speeding violations.
Read More →
Operation Safe Driver Week: Why the Industry's Oldest Safety Campaign Still Matters to Fleets
A look at how a 2007 enforcement initiative became one of the most consequential weeks on the fleet safety calendar, and what it means for your drivers in 2026.
Read More →
Nexar-Nauto Merger Aims to Give Fleets Better Safety Intelligence Through Larger Driving Dataset
Stefan Heck tells Automotive Fleet that combining more than 10 billion miles of driving history with Nexar's AI models will give fleets deeper insights into driver risk and roadway conditions than either company could provide independently.
Read More →From Silos to Solutions: Relationship Management for Safer Fleets
From telematics adoption and driver accountability to policy consistency and risk mitigation, this episode breaks down what it really takes to build a safer fleet culture without slowing business down.
Read More →
IIHS Launches First Commercial Vehicle Safety Evaluations
The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety has begun evaluating heavy-duty pickups and cargo vans for driver protection. Which models earned top marks?
Read More →
Reducing Risk by Eliminating Phone Use Behind the Wheel
Hosted with the cofounder of Lifesaver Mobile, this episode addresses phone use behind the wheel and how to design a driving environment that actually helps prevents accidents.
Read More →
Cameras, Safety and Insurance: From Reactive Claims to Real-Time Prevention (Part 2 of 2)
Part Two: Commercial auto remains one of the most challenging and costly lines of coverage for fleet operators and insurers alike. Continue learning more about how to effectively address these issues from Onur Aksan, Enterprise Business Development Executive, Geotab
Read More →
How 5-Second Telematics Data Is Changing Fleet Safety
This episode connects with Steve Santostasi of Ford Pro and covers how a few seconds of data can make a difference in fleet safety.
Read More →
Managing Road Risk at Scale: Why Fleet Safety Needs a Data-Driven Framework
Insights from the FIA Road and Driver Safety Indexes reveal how to manage road risk on a larger scale.
Read More →
Stellantis Recalls 1.3 Million Jeep Vehicles Worldwide Over Fire Risk
Stellantis is recalling more than 1.3 million Jeep Wrangler and Gladiator models worldwide over a fire risk linked to power steering pump wiring.
Read More →
