🗓️ Last updated: June 2026·Verified by QuicklyFig editors
📦 Freight Broker Tool

🚩 Double Brokering Risk Calculator

Score a carrier or load for the fraud red flags specific to double brokering — identity mismatch, brand-new authority, payment redirection, contact mismatch, COI/insurance mismatch, and rate-confirmation inconsistencies. This is different from the Rate Confirmation Risk Scorer (which scores a rate con's operational and financial terms) and the Carrier Vetting Checklist (which scores documentation completeness). This tool focuses on double-brokering fraud signals. Awareness aid only. Not a fraud determination, not legal advice, and not proof of wrongdoing.

🆔 Identity & Authority
💸 Payment & Contact
🛡️ Insurance & Load Consistency
Estimated Risk Band
Risk Score
Red Flags Triggered
Advertisement — 728×90

How to read your double-brokering risk score

Double brokering happens when a carrier or unlicensed party takes a load you tendered and quietly re-brokers it to a different carrier without your authority or consent. When it goes wrong, the original broker can end up paying twice — once to the fraudster who took the load and again to the carrier who actually hauled it — and stays exposed to cargo claims. This tool scores the fraud red flags specific to double brokering so you can catch the warning signs before you tender. It is an awareness aid only — not a fraud determination, not legal advice, and not proof of wrongdoing.

Six signals drive the score. A carrier identity mismatch — where the name or MC on the rate con or invoice does not match the FMCSA-authorized carrier — is the strongest flag. Brand-new authority, a sudden request to redirect payment (a new remit-to, factor, or bank account, especially mid-load), generic or mismatched contact details, a COI whose named insured differs from the carrier actually hauling, and rate-confirmation inconsistencies (a driver swap or a load re-posted to another board) all add weight. Each maps to points; the total normalizes to a 0–100 score.

What the bands mean

  • Low risk (0–14): Few or no red flags. Proceed with standard verification.
  • Elevated risk (15–34): One or two soft flags. Do a little extra checking before you tender.
  • High risk (35–59): Multiple red flags. Re-verify the carrier directly through FMCSA and confirm the COI before tendering.
  • Critical risk (60–100): Strong fraud signals. Do not tender until every red flag is resolved.

A high score does not mean fraud is occurring — it means do more verification before you tender. Re-verify authority and contact details directly through FMCSA, confirm the COI with the insurer, and never change a remit-to without written verification.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is double brokering and why is it risky?
A carrier or unlicensed party re-brokers a load you tendered to a different carrier without authority or consent. The original broker can end up paying twice — the fraudster and the carrier who actually hauled — and is exposed to cargo claims if the load is damaged, lost, or stolen.
How is this different from the Rate Confirmation Risk Scorer?
The Rate Confirmation Risk Scorer reviews the operational and financial terms of a rate con — detention, payment terms, and liability language. This tool scores fraud red flags specific to double brokering — identity, authority age, payment redirection, and COI mismatches — to flag a load before you tender it.
Does a high score mean the carrier is committing fraud?
No. This is an awareness aid that weighs common red flags into a single score. A high score means do more verification before you tender, not that fraud is occurring. It is not a determination or legal advice.
What should I do if a load scores High or Critical?
Re-verify the carrier's authority and contact details directly through FMCSA, confirm the COI with the insurer, refuse mid-load remit-to changes without written verification, and consider not tendering until the red flags are resolved.

Running broker numbers in separate spreadsheets?

Broker Command helps organize margins, receivables, customer profitability, commissions, carrier checks, and cash-flow gaps in one freight broker workspace. Free to calculate. Pro to save.

Join the waitlist

Awareness aid only. This tool weighs common double-brokering red flags into a single score and does not provide legal, financial, compliance, or insurance advice. A high score is a prompt to do more verification, not a fraud determination and not proof of wrongdoing by any carrier, broker, or party. Always verify carrier authority and insurance directly through FMCSA and the insurer, and seek professional advice before acting.