Moving Company Enforcement Actions: June 2026 Roundup
Peak season opens: the federal-state enforcement machinery, sweep-season history, and the high-pressure booking self-defense playbook.

Documented enforcement actions against moving companies and brokers — FMCSA orders, DOT Office of Inspector General cases, and state attorney-general actions, each sourced to the official public record. Statuses reflect the linked records as of each story's publication — verify current operating authority in the FMCSA SAFER database and see our mover licensing guide for the step-by-step checks.
Peak season opens: the federal-state enforcement machinery, sweep-season history, and the high-pressure booking self-defense playbook.
Kentucky permanently bans Margaret's Movers with a $234,000+ judgment, FMCSA launches biometric registration, and the storage-leverage playbook.
The second Navistar settlement ($474,123, broker services), Motus reaches the Federal Register, and the complete moving-broker explainer with five checks.
A continuation month used well: how to read a moving company complaint record like an investigator - categories, denominators, and the patterns that predict enforcement.
The $1,834,058 Navistar settlement, explained: penalties versus restitution, settlement versus judgment, and how affected customers pursue money back safely.
What the year inherited: active cases, the 2023-2024 enforcement baseline, and the complete database walkthrough for vetting any mover before you sign.
Every documented 2026 enforcement action against moving companies - two federal-state settlements, a permanent Kentucky ban, and the Motus registration overhaul - indexed month by month with primary sources.