Key Takeaways

  • Complete the form the same day as the incident. Accuracy improves significantly when details are recorded before memory consolidates.
  • Every field should have an entry. Write 'unknown' or 'N/A' rather than leaving blanks — a blank field in a submitted form generates questions.
  • This is a factual record, not a fault determination. Avoid conclusions about who caused the incident or what the outcome should be.

What this form captures

The driver incident report collects the core facts that every subsequent review, coaching session, and claim process will reference: what happened, when, where, who was involved, what was damaged, and what steps were taken. A complete form submitted the same day is worth more than a detailed reconstruction attempted a week later.

Drivers fill out the sections covering what they personally observed. Dispatchers, safety managers, or owners complete the review and follow-up sections. Keep those two parts distinct — the driver's direct observations and the company's subsequent review are different types of information and shouldn't be mixed.

Key sections and how to complete them

Incident details: use exact times and locations. 'Exit 22 northbound I-95, 2:15 PM' is useful; 'around midday on the highway' is not. Road and weather conditions should describe what was actually present at the time, not a general characterization.

Other party section: fill out every field you have information for. If police didn't respond and you couldn't get insurance information, note why. A form showing what you tried to collect and couldn't — with a reason — is more credible than one with unexplained blanks.

Evidence documentation fields

The form should note whether photos were taken, what was photographed, and where the files are stored. If dash cam footage exists, note the system name, whether the clip was preserved, and who handled preservation.

Listing evidence in the incident report creates an index. The report is often the first document a claim reviewer sees — if they need to locate photos or footage, the report should tell them where to look.

Submission and follow-up

Submit to the safety contact named in your incident reporting policy the same day. Note on your copy who you submitted to and when. The review section should be completed by the safety manager or owner within 24 to 48 hours, not left open indefinitely.

If the incident generates a claim number, coaching session, or corrective action, cross-reference those records in the original incident file. The report is the hub; other documents attach to it.

Step-by-step checklist

  • Complete all required fields.
  • Attach supporting documents.
  • Record who reviewed the form.
  • Store the form under company policy.

Fill & Print Template

Driver Incident Report Template

Fill in the fields below, then use the Print button to print or save as PDF. Nothing is saved or transmitted — this form works entirely in your browser.

Adapt Before Use

This template is a starting point. Adapt fields, review roles, retention steps, and escalation rules before using it with drivers or claim files.

Do not delete, trim, overwrite, or rename original evidence in a way that breaks the file history.

Safety Boundary

General information only. This is not safety consulting, regulatory compliance advice, or a substitute for current official requirements and company policy.

Source Notes

  • Motor Carrier Safety PlannerFMCSA · official · last checked 2026-06-08Supports: safety-management, driver-policy, documentation

    General carrier safety management and recordkeeping reference.

  • Compliance, Safety, AccountabilityFMCSA · official · last checked 2026-06-08Supports: fleet-safety, safety-management, safety-performance

    Used for general carrier safety management context.

  • Roadway SafetyNational Safety Council · industry · last checked 2026-06-08Supports: driver-safety, coaching, incident-prevention

    Industry safety reference for driver coaching and incident prevention language.