The Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles (BMV) confirmed on April 1, 2026, that virtually all non-resident commercial driver’s licenses in the state were canceled that same day.
The measure stemmed from House Enrolled Act 1200 (HEA 1200), a law signed by Governor Mike Braun in mid-March that went into effect just three weeks later—an unusually short timeframe for legislation of this scope. Under normal circumstances, laws signed during the spring took effect on July 1.
This is an adverse effect to those who depend on their driver’s license to work, from truck operators, to taxi or Uber drivers, or even bus chauffeurs.
Nearly All Non-Resident CDL Drivers Lose Their Licenses
The BMV notified 1,790 drivers by mail on March 16 that their drivers licenses would be canceled within 15 days. The agency’s executive director of communications, Gregory Dunn, summarized the outcome: “Nearly all non-resident CDL drivers have lost their driving privileges with the passage of HEA1200.”
At some point on Wednesday, an agency spokesperson indicated that the number of non-resident licenses still valid in the state could be counted on one hand.
The legislation was drafted by State Representative Jim Pressel (R-20) and was substantially amended on the last day of the legislative session, prompted by a series of fatal accidents involving immigrant drivers. “We want to make sure that the drivers behind the wheel are among the best prepared we can get,” Pressel said.
Indiana: Non-Resident CDL Only for 3 Visas, Others Face Felony
The new legal framework stipulates that only holders of three categories of temporary work visas can obtain or maintain a non-domiciled commercial driver’s license in Indiana: H-2A (temporary agricultural workers), H-2B (temporary non-agricultural workers), and E-2 (investors).
Any other immigrant who drives a commercial vehicle without the required documentation is subject to Level 6 felony charges, with an individual civil fine of $5,000. Employers who knowingly hire drivers in this situation face penalties of up to $50,000.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) published a final rule on March 16, 2026—the same day the BMV sent the revocation letters—that restricts the issuance of [the following] at the national level. CDL not domiciled to the same three visa groups. Weeks earlier, the agency had notified 24 states, including Indiana, that they were issuing those licenses incorrectly. Indiana chose to preemptively pass its own legislation before the 2026 legislative session ended.
The number of bonds issued in Indiana grew steadily for years: from approximately 130 in 2018 to about 1,900 in 2024, with a cumulative total of around 3,100 by the time the BMV halted issuance in September 2025, following the first federal warnings. Since then, the number gradually decreased until the mass revocation on April 1.
The Specific Options Available to Affected Drivers
For the approximately 1,790 drivers notified, the margin of action is technically limited but not nonexistent, depending on each individual’s immigration situation.
Those who already have an H-2A, H-2B, or E-2 visa can present that documentation to the BMV and maintain or recover their non-domiciled commercial license under the new scheme. Holders of a permanent resident card (green card) or naturalized citizens are eligible for a standard CDL, which HEA 1200 did not affect.
A second avenue that industry analysts have pointed out, albeit with complex legal implications, stems from the architecture of the federal licensing system. Federal law under 49 CFR Part 383 obliges all states to recognize the CDLs issued by other states.
Indiana revoked the licenses it itself issued, but it lacks the authority to disregard a CDL from Illinois or from another state on its highways, since that would require action by Congress or the FMCSA, not the state legislature.
What HEA 1200 does not prohibit, in strictly legal terms, is a driver establishing residency in a state with different rules and obtaining their license there. However, this process depends on the specific regulations of each receiving state and the individual’s immigration status.
Drivers Can Challenge Revoked CDLs or Regularize Status, but Fines Reach up to $50,000
The third option is immigration regularization through specialized legal counsel, which could eventually lead to obtaining a standard CDL. Those who believe their revocation was processed incorrectly—for example, because they obtained their license in compliance with the regulations in effect at the time of issuance—have legal grounds to explore, given that the FMCSA itself acknowledges that states are not obligated to revoke licenses validly issued under the previous regulations.
Driving without a valid CDL, however, is not without consequences: the individual fine amounts to $5,000. And employers who keep those drivers in their fleets risk $50,000 for violation.




