Broker Fraud Red Flags: The Checks That Take Sixty Seconds
RateAnchor · July 2026 · 6 min read
The load pays $3.40 a mile, the "broker" needs an answer in ten minutes, and the email signature looks exactly like a company you've heard of. That combination — not any single detail — is how freight fraud takes hundreds of millions from carriers every year, and small carriers absorb most of it because they can least afford the sixty seconds it takes to check. Sixty seconds. That's the whole defense.
A composite of real scam-load emails, redacted and annotated. Every tell above appears daily in working inboxes — usually three at a time.
The sixty-second stack
One: the MC number in the email must exist in federal records and its status must be active with authority for the freight in question.
Two: the contact details must match the federal record — a legitimate broker emailing from a domain registered last month, or a phone number that doesn't match the filing, is the classic identity-theft tell.
Three: the age of everything. New broker authority isn't automatically fraud, but new authority plus urgency plus above-market rates is the signature combination.
Four: payment terms in writing before the truck moves. Fraudulent operations resist paperwork the way legitimate ones resist paying detention.
The uncomfortable rule
If a load feels too good, price-check it against the lane's honest band. Fraud rings pay 'great rates' because they never intend to pay at all. The band is your lie detector.
RateAnchor's Shield runs the federal checks — authority status, record matching, domain age — on-device, in seconds, before you sign. It never tells anyone what you checked, because it collects nothing.
Built inside working truck fleets in the USA — by people who quote loads for a living. RateAnchor is decision support for professional carriers; nothing here is legal, tax, or financial advice.