What Alberta Carriers Need to Know for June 1, 2026
Effective June 1, 2026, Alberta commercial carriers are legally required to provide a Commercial Driver Experience Certificate to Class 1 drivers when their employment ends.
This change is part of an update to the Traffic Safety Act regulatory framework and introduces new obligations for carriers around driver recordkeeping and disclosure.
What Is the Certificate?
The Commercial Driver Experience Certificate is a standardized record of a driver’s verified commercial driving experience while employed with your company.
This record is now portable, meaning drivers can use it with:
- Future employers
- Insurance providers
- Regulators and auditors
It replaces informal or inconsistent experience letters with a mandatory, regulated document.
Who Must Complete It?
All Alberta commercial carriers employing Class 1 drivers operating vehicles with a registered gross vehicle weight of 11,794 kg (26,000 lbs) or more must:
- Maintain a record of each driver’s experience
- Issue the certificate when the driver leaves employment
Why This Matters
This is not just administrative — it directly impacts compliance, safety, and insurability.
Key implications:
- Legal requirement under provincial regulation
- Required for NSC audits and carrier safety profiles
- Supports accurate insurance underwriting
- Prevents high-risk drivers from moving undetected between carriers
- Recognizes experienced, professional drivers
Key Dates
| Milestone | Date |
|---|---|
| Regulation introduced | May 12, 2025 |
| Phase-in period begins | December 1, 2025 |
| Full compliance required | June 1, 2026 |
Carrier Responsibility
Carriers must:
- Maintain accurate, up-to-date driver experience records
- Complete the certificate in full
- Provide the certificate to the driver upon termination or departure (for any reason)
Failure to comply may impact:
- NSC audit results
- Carrier profile ratings
- Insurance eligibility and pricing
Why This Was Introduced
Alberta identified a gap in the system:
- Driver abstracts show violations — not experience
- Poor-performing drivers could move between carriers without accountability
- Experienced drivers were not being properly recognized
The goal of this regulation is to:
- Ensure driver history follows the driver
- Improve highway safety
- Strengthen audit and enforcement standards
- Support fairer insurance outcomes
What’s Changed
Before:
- Experience records were inconsistent
- No obligation to provide documentation
- Drivers had no standardized proof of experience
Now:
- Standardized recordkeeping is required
- Certificates must be issued by law
- Drivers have a legal right to their experience record
Required Form
Carriers must complete the official Government of Alberta form:
Commercial Driver Experience Certificate (TSS14943)
How This Impacts Your Insurance Program
This change will directly influence how insurers evaluate drivers:
- More accurate driver risk assessment
- Greater emphasis on verified experience
- Potential impact on driver eligibility and fleet premiums
Carriers with strong documentation and experienced drivers will be better positioned at renewal.
Next Steps for Carriers
- Review your current driver recordkeeping process
- Ensure systems are in place to track experience accurately
- Train staff on completing and issuing the certificate
- Prepare for full compliance by June 1, 2026
We’re Here to Help
As your insurance partner, we can help you:
- Align your driver management practices with insurer expectations
- Strengthen your position at renewal
For help with this transition, contact our strategic partners at Strategic HSE Systems, who offer specialized expertise in transportation safety and compliance.
Phone (780) 617-7706 | Toll Free (877) 441-7732 | info@strategichse.com

