Mobile emissions testing eliminates fleet downtime and keeps your trucks compliant. Learn why fleet managers across LA and Riverside Counties choose on-site Clean Truck Check services.
Mobile Clean Truck Check testing brings the same CARB-certified emissions inspection to your location instead of requiring you to send trucks to a stationary facility. We arrive at your yard, job site, or wherever your trucks are parked with all the equipment needed to perform official HD I/M compliance testing.
The testing itself is identical to what happens at a brick-and-mortar location. For trucks with 2013 and newer diesel engines, that means an OBD scan using CARB-approved diagnostic equipment. For older trucks with 2012 and earlier engines, it’s a smoke opacity test using SAE J1667 compliant meters plus a visual inspection of emissions control equipment. Results get uploaded directly to the Clean Truck Check Vehicle Inspection System, or CTC-VIS, the same day.
What changes is where it happens and how it fits into your operation. Instead of pulling a truck off a route, finding a driver to take it across town, and waiting for an appointment slot that might not align with your schedule, the testing comes to you.
The process is straightforward. You schedule an appointment that works around your operational needs, whether that’s early morning before your trucks roll out, during a shift change, or on a weekend when vehicles are parked. We show up with portable CARB-certified equipment, perform the required inspection, and handle all the documentation and state reporting.
Most OBD tests take 15 to 30 minutes per vehicle. Smoke opacity tests for older trucks take a bit longer because they involve the visual inspection component, but you’re still looking at under an hour per vehicle in most cases. If you’re testing multiple trucks in one visit, we can move through your fleet systematically without you needing to coordinate drivers, keys, or logistics beyond making the vehicles accessible.
Once testing is complete, results go straight into the CTC-VIS database. You get a copy for your records, and the state has what it needs to mark that vehicle that is CARB compliant. No follow-up trips. No waiting for paperwork to process. No wondering if the submission went through correctly.
The efficiency matters because California’s testing requirements are only getting stricter. Right now, most commercial trucks need testing twice a year. By October 2027, OBD-equipped vehicles will need testing four times annually. That’s a test every three months. Mobile testing scales with that requirement in a way that traditional facility-based testing simply can’t for most fleet operations.
If you operate a diesel or alternative fuel vehicle over 14,000 pounds gross vehicle weight rating in California, Clean Truck Check applies to you. That includes commercial trucks, buses, RVs, dump trucks, delivery vehicles, and even motorhomes. It doesn’t matter if your truck is registered in California or another state. If it operates on California roads, it falls under CARB’s jurisdiction.
The program kicked off in 2023 with roadside emissions monitoring devices flagging high emitters. By 2024, registration requirements went into effect. As of January 2025, the testing mandate is fully enforced with semi-annual deadlines. California registered vehicles have compliance dates tied to their DMV registration renewal. Out-of-state vehicles have deadlines based on the last digit of their VIN.
What catches people off guard is how comprehensive the requirements are. You need to register each vehicle in the CTC-VIS database, pay an annual compliance fee that’s currently around thirty-two dollars per vehicle, and submit passing test results within 90 days of your deadline. All three components have to be current, or you’re non-compliant.
Non-compliance isn’t a gray area. The DMV will place a registration hold on your vehicle, which means you can’t renew your registration and legally can’t operate that truck on public roads. CARB enforcement can issue fines, and those fines scale quickly. For fleets, a single missed deadline across multiple vehicles can turn into a five-figure problem overnight.
The other piece that surprises fleet managers is enforcement at ports and railyards. Facilities throughout Los Angeles County and the Inland Empire now require proof of Clean Truck Check compliance before they’ll allow a truck on their property. If your driver shows up without current certification, they’re getting turned away, and that load isn’t getting moved.
The math on mobile testing is simple. Downtime costs money. When you send a truck to a testing facility, you’re paying for the test itself, the driver’s time, the fuel to get there and back, and most importantly, the revenue that truck isn’t generating while it’s off the road. Industry data shows fleet downtime averages between $448 and $760 per vehicle per day. Even a few hours out of service adds up fast.
Mobile testing eliminates most of that cost. Your truck stays at your yard. Your driver isn’t spending half a day shuttling a vehicle across town. Your schedule doesn’t get disrupted because someone had to take a truck off a route to make a 2 PM testing appointment. We work around your operation, not the other way around.
For fleets with multiple vehicles, the efficiency compounds. Instead of coordinating five separate trips to a testing facility over the course of a week, you schedule one mobile visit and we get all five trucks tested in a few hours. That’s one appointment to manage, one invoice to process, and one block of time instead of five separate disruptions.
Let’s walk through what actually happens when you send a truck to a testing facility. First, you need a driver available during business hours when the facility is open. If your trucks run routes during the day, that means pulling someone off their normal assignment. You’re paying their hourly wage for drive time, wait time, and the test itself.
Then there’s the lost productivity. That truck isn’t making deliveries, picking up loads, or generating revenue. If you’re running a tight operation where every vehicle is scheduled and every route is optimized, taking a truck offline creates a gap. Maybe another truck has to cover extra stops. Maybe a delivery gets delayed. Maybe you have to bring in a rental to fill the hole, and now you’re paying for that too.
Facility-based testing also introduces variability you can’t control. Appointment availability might not line up with your schedule. You might show up and find out there’s a wait because they’re running behind. If your truck fails the test, you’ve got to get it repaired and come back for a retest, which means another round of the same logistical headache.
The numbers add up quickly. Take a mid-sized fleet with ten trucks. Each truck needs testing twice a year under current requirements. That’s twenty separate facility visits annually. If each visit costs three hours of driver time at thirty dollars an hour, you’re at ninety dollars in labor per visit, or $1,800 in labor costs alone. Add in the opportunity cost of those trucks being offline, and you’re easily into five figures of indirect costs just for compliance testing.
Mobile fleet smog testing service collapses that timeline and those costs. One scheduled visit, all ten trucks tested in half a day, minimal disruption to your operation. The difference isn’t marginal—it’s the difference between compliance being a constant operational drag and compliance being a checkbox you handle efficiently.
Fleet-wide compliance gets complicated fast when you’re managing testing schedules for dozens of vehicles with different deadlines. California registered trucks have compliance dates tied to their registration renewal, which means every vehicle in your fleet might have a different deadline based on when you originally registered it. Out-of-state trucks have deadlines based on VIN numbers, which creates another set of dates to track.
We can work with you to batch vehicles with similar deadlines into single appointments. Instead of trying to remember that truck 47 needs testing by March 15th and truck 52 needs it by March 22nd, you schedule one visit in early March and we knock out both trucks plus any others due around the same time. That consolidation reduces the administrative burden of tracking compliance across your fleet.
The other advantage is flexibility. Traditional testing facilities operate during standard business hours. If your fleet runs 24/7 or operates on non-standard schedules, finding time to get trucks tested during facility hours creates friction. We can often accommodate early morning, evening, or weekend appointments. That flexibility means you can schedule testing during natural downtime in your operation rather than forcing downtime to happen.
For larger fleets operating across Los Angeles County and Riverside County, we offer ongoing service agreements where we proactively monitor your compliance deadlines and reach out to schedule testing before you’re up against a deadline. That takes compliance management off your plate entirely. You’re not tracking dates, you’re not scrambling to get trucks tested at the last minute, and you’re not risking a registration hold because something slipped through the cracks.
The peace of mind matters. CARB’s enforcement is real, and the consequences of non-compliance are severe. When you’re managing a fleet, you’ve got enough to worry about without adding “did we get truck 23 tested on time” to the list.