Not every freight broker operates the same way. Some cut corners that put your freight — and your money — at risk. Here are the warning signs that tell you to find a different broker.
Every licensed freight broker has an FMCSA Motor Carrier (MC) number. If a broker hesitates, deflects, or can't give you their MC number in the first conversation, walk away. This is table stakes — legitimate brokers are proud of their credentials and share them upfront.
Verify any MC number at safer.fmcsa.dot.gov before tendering a load.
A broker who quotes you a rate without asking about freight dimensions, weight, commodity, accessorials, and pickup/delivery requirements is guessing. That quote will either be wrong or have expensive surprises at invoicing. Good brokers ask questions before quoting.
Hidden fees — fuel surcharges not disclosed upfront, detention they didn't warn you about, accessorial charges for liftgate or inside delivery — are a sign of a broker who values the transaction over the relationship. Get everything in writing before confirming a load.
You have the right to know what carrier is handling your load. If a broker is evasive about carrier identity, it's often because they've double-brokered your load — resold it to another broker without your knowledge. Double-brokering is a major fraud risk and leaves you with no direct relationship with the actual carrier.
The test of a broker isn't when things go well — it's when a truck breaks down, a driver is running 4 hours late, or a load is refused at delivery. If your broker becomes hard to reach the moment a problem arises, you're on your own.
Carrier fraud and cargo theft are real. A broker who doesn't verify carrier insurance, operating authority, and safety rating before tendering your load is exposing you to significant financial risk. Ask directly: "What carrier vetting process do you use?" Acceptable answer: a named platform like Descartes MyCarrierPortal, Carrier411, or similar. "We check them ourselves" is not acceptable.
"This rate is only good for the next 10 minutes" is a sales tactic, not a market reality. Yes, spot rates move — but a legitimate broker gives you enough time to review the quote, ask questions, and make an informed decision. Pressure to commit immediately without time to review is a red flag for a broker who knows their rate won't hold up to scrutiny.
A reliable freight broker provides their MC number without hesitation, explains exactly how carriers are vetted, gives you an all-in price with no hidden fees, tells you who's hauling your freight, and stays reachable when problems arise. That's the minimum. Anything less and you're taking unnecessary risk.
IZY Logistics is a licensed freight broker (MC #1615290) serving shippers across the United States. Get a competitive quote in under 30 seconds.
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