Motive ELD & Electronic Logbook: Complete Driver & Fleet Compliance Guide

How the Motive ELD system works, how to get compliant from setup to roadside inspection, HOS rule sets, exemptions, and fixes for the most common electronic logbook problems.
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Introduction

A DOT officer pulls you over at a weigh station and asks for your logs. If you're still carrying a paper log book and fumbling through pages to find yesterday's grid, you're behind where most carriers already are. The FMCSA ELD mandate has been in full effect since December 2019, and for the vast majority of CDL drivers operating in interstate commerce, a motive eld or equivalent certified device is now a legal requirement, not an option.

The motive electronic logbook replaces that paper grid entirely. It records your duty status automatically when the vehicle moves, syncs with the Motive Driver app on your phone, and displays your full log history on demand during a roadside inspection. Fleet admins see everything in real time from the Motive admin dashboard at gomotive.com.

This guide covers how the system works, how to get compliant if you’re setting it up for the first time, what happens at a roadside inspection, and which drivers are still legally exempt from the ELD mandate. Steps reflect the current Motive platform as of the publication date. UI details may vary by account type or device generation.

What Is an Electronic Logbook and Why It Replaced Paper Logs

An electronic logbook, or elog, is a digital record of a driver’s hours of service that’s generated automatically by a certified ELD device connected to the truck’s engine. The electronic logbook dot requirement exists because paper logs were too easy to falsify, too inconsistent, and too slow to audit. The FMCSA found that paper-based HOS records had a significantly higher rate of errors and violations compared to electronic records from certified devices.

The ELD mandate, issued under 49 CFR Part 395, took effect in stages. The final compliance deadline for most carriers was December 16, 2019. From that point, paper dot log books became non-compliant for drivers covered by the rule. An ELD from a provider on the FMCSA’s registered device list, which includes Motive, became the required record-keeping method.

What Elogs Actually Record

A motive electronic logbook captures more than just drive time. It records every duty status change with a timestamp, the vehicle’s GPS coordinates at the time of each change, engine hours, vehicle miles, and the identity of the driver assigned to the trip. All of this gets logged automatically without the driver manually entering anything beyond duty status selections.

This matters at a roadside inspection. When a DOT officer asks for your logs, the electronic record shows not just what you logged, but what the vehicle’s engine data confirms. If the truck was moving and the driver was logged as Off Duty, the ELD flags that as a discrepancy. Paper logs couldn’t do that.

The Difference Between an ELD and an AOBRD

Before the ELD mandate fully took effect, some carriers used AOBRDs (Automatic On-Board Recording Devices), an older generation of electronic logging hardware. AOBRDs had less strict technical requirements than ELDs and couldn’t automatically switch a driver to Driving status based on vehicle motion. The grandfathering period for AOBRDs ended December 16, 2019. Any carrier still running AOBRD hardware after that date needed to upgrade to a certified ELD. If you’ve been on the platform since the KeepTruckin days, motive formerly keeptruckin is the phrase you’ll see used across the industry to describe the same product under its new name.

Important: Motive does not support AOBRD functionality. The Motive ELD meets the full technical specification required under the current FMCSA rule.

How the Motive ELD System Works

The motive eld system has two components that work together: the physical hardware that plugs into the truck and the Motive Driver app that runs on the driver’s phone or tablet.

The Hardware: Motive Gateway

The Motive Gateway is the physical ELD device. It plugs into the truck’s diagnostic port, either the OBD-II port on newer trucks or the J1939 nine-pin port on older commercial vehicles. The device draws power from the truck’s electrical system and powers on automatically with the ignition.

Once plugged in and powered, the Gateway captures engine data continuously: vehicle speed, engine RPM, ignition state, odometer reading, and location via GPS. This data is what makes the electronic logbook legally defensible. The log isn’t just what the driver said they did. It’s confirmed by engine telemetry.

The Gateway communicates with the Motive Driver app on the driver’s phone via Bluetooth. It also has its own cellular connection for sending data to the Motive platform independently, which means logs sync to the admin dashboard even if the driver’s phone is in airplane mode.

The Driver App: Your Mobile Electronic Logbook

The Motive Driver app is the driver-facing part of the motive elog system. It runs on iOS and Android. After pairing with the Gateway via Bluetooth, the app displays your current HOS status, your duty status graph for the day, hours remaining across all rule sets, and your full log history.

The app automatically switches your status to Driving when the vehicle moves above five miles per hour. When the vehicle stops, it doesn’t automatically change your status back. You select the appropriate duty status manually: On Duty (Not Driving), Off Duty, or Sleeper Berth.

Core compliance mechanism: This automatic driving detection is what makes the system tamper-evident. You can't manually log driving time and underreport it. The vehicle's movement creates the record.

How Data Flows Through the System

Truck moves

Gateway detects vehicle motion and records GPS coordinates, speed, and engine data.

Bluetooth sync

Data transfers to the Motive Driver app in real time.

App updates

The motive e log display updates, switching the duty status graph from On Duty to Driving automatically.

Cellular upload

The Gateway and the app both send data to Motive's servers. The fleet admin dashboard at gomotive.com updates accordingly.

Admin visibility

Fleet managers see the driver's current status, location, and available hours on the live map and in the Drivers section of the dashboard.

Setting Up the Motive ELD: Hardware and App Configuration

Getting the motive eld set up for the first time requires both hardware installation and app configuration. Fleet admins handle part of this from the admin dashboard. Drivers complete the rest from the app.

Step 1: Install the Motive Gateway in the Truck

Step 2: Assign the Device to a Vehicle in the Admin Dashboard

From the fleet admin panel at gomotive.com:

Step 3: Driver App Pairing

HOS Rules and How the Electronic Logbook Tracks Them

The motive electronic logbook enforces HOS rules automatically based on the rule set assigned to each driver in the admin dashboard. Assign the wrong rule set and the driver’s available hours calculate incorrectly, which creates both operational problems and compliance exposure.

HOS Rule Sets Available in Motive

RULE SET MAX DAILY DRIVING ON-DUTY WINDOW WEEKLY CYCLE LIMIT REQUIRED OFF-DUTY REST
US 60-Hour/7-Day 11 hours 14 hours 60 hours in 7 days 10 consecutive hours
US 70-Hour/8-Day 11 hours 14 hours 70 hours in 8 days 10 consecutive hours
Canada South 13 hours 16 hours 70 hours in 7 days 8 consecutive hours
Canada North 13 hours 18 hours 80 hours in 7 days 8 consecutive hours
Short-Haul (Property) 11 hours 14 hours N/A 10 consecutive hours
Fleet admins set the rule set per driver under Drivers > [Driver Name] > Edit Profile > Hours of Service Rules. Drivers cannot change their own rule set. If a driver regularly crosses the US-Canada border, contact Motive support to confirm how to handle rule set transitions for those runs, since this varies by account configuration.

What the App Shows Drivers in Real Time

The elog app home screen displays four critical numbers at all times:
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Drive Time Remaining

Hours left before the 11-hour driving limit is reached

Cycle Time Remaining

Hours left before the weekly cycle limit requires a 34-hour restart

Break Reminder

Countdown to the required 30-minute break after 8 cumulative hours of driving

Shift Time Remaining

Hours left in the 14-hour on-duty window

When any of these counters reaches zero, the driver is legally required to stop. The app displays warnings before the limits are hit, not just after. A driver running the US 70-hour rule who has two hours of cycle time left will see that prominently on their home screen. Fleet managers see the same data on the admin dashboard, which lets dispatchers plan loads around driver availability without waiting for drivers to self-report.

Automatic vs. Manual Duty Status

The ELD automatically records Driving status based on vehicle motion. Every other duty status requires a manual selection from the driver. The most common compliance gap in new ELD users: forgetting to manually log On Duty (Not Driving) during fueling stops, pre-trip inspections, and loading. These activities count against on-duty time and need to be recorded correctly.

If a driver makes an error, they can request a log edit through the app under Logs > [Date] > Edit. The edit must include an annotation explaining the reason. Fleet managers review and approve log edits from the admin dashboard. Drivers cannot edit their own logs without that annotation, and they cannot delete a certified entry.

DOT Compliance and Roadside Inspection Mode

A roadside inspection is where the motive eld system’s compliance value becomes concrete. An officer can request your logs at any point during a stop, and the Motive Driver app has a dedicated mode for exactly that situation.

Using Inspection Mode

Open the Motive Driver app

Launch the app from your phone's home screen.

Tap DOT Inspection on the home screen

This activates the dedicated read-only inspection view.

Hand the device to the officer or hold it for review

Inspection mode shows the current day's log and the previous seven days in a read-only format. The officer can scroll through duty status graphs and view the supporting data without being able to edit anything. The display meets FMCSA requirements for what must be visible during an inspection.

Electronic Log Transfer Methods

Some officers prefer a digital transfer rather than reviewing the device screen. The Motive app supports two transfer methods:

Web Services Transfer

Tap DOT Inspection > Transfer Logs > Transfer via Web Services. The app sends a certified copy of the logs directly to the FMCSA's inspection portal. The officer receives a reference number to pull up the records on their end.

Email Transfer

Tap DOT Inspection > Transfer Logs > Transfer via Email. The logs are sent as a file to an email address the officer provides. This method is less common but available when the officer requests it.

For drivers running older KeepTruckin ELD hardware that predates the Motive rebrand, the inspection process works the same way through the updated Motive Driver app. The keep trucking elog system migrated to Motive’s infrastructure during the rebrand, so legacy devices still generate compliant logs.

What Gets Checked During an Inspection

Beyond the log itself, an officer conducting a Level 1 or Level 3 inspection will also look at:

Don't wait until the weigh station: Don't wait until the weigh station: Drivers who can't demonstrate how to use inspection mode, or whose app shows discrepancies between logged and actual driving time, are more likely to receive violations. Knowing the app before you need it at a weigh station is not optional.

ELD Exemptions and Special Rules: Who Still Uses Paper Logs

Not every CDL driver is required to use a motive eld or any certified ELD device. The FMCSA built exemptions into the mandate for specific driver types and operating conditions. Knowing where you fall matters, because operating without an ELD when you’re required to have one is a violation, and operating with unnecessary equipment costs you money.

Drivers Exempt from the ELD Mandate

Short-Haul Drivers

Drivers who operate within a 150 air-mile radius of their home terminal, return to the home terminal each day, and have not exceeded 11 hours of driving time in a day are exempt from the ELD requirement. These drivers can use paper logs or timecards instead. The Motive short-haul exemption rule set reflects this, but confirm with your fleet admin that it's set up correctly for your specific operation.

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Driveaway/Towaway Drivers

Drivers transporting vehicles as cargo (moving a new truck from a manufacturer to a dealer, for example) qualify for an exemption if the vehicle being driven is part of the shipment.

Pre-2000 Commercial Vehicles

Trucks manufactured before model year 2000 are exempt from the ELD mandate because they lack the engine control module data that ELD devices require. Paper logs remain the compliant method for these vehicles.

Driver Salesperson Exemptions

Drivers who transport goods from a motor carrier and whose primary job function is selling those goods may qualify for an exemption if they drive fewer than a specific number of days per year. This is a narrow exemption and requires careful review of the regulatory language.

When Paper Logs Are Still Required

Even ELD-equipped drivers must carry and know how to use paper logs for situations where the ELD malfunctions. Under FMCSA rules, if an ELD fails during a trip, the driver must switch to paper logs immediately and note the malfunction in their record. The driver has eight days to get the ELD repaired or replaced. Paper logs must be available in the cab for this contingency.

Fleet admin note: Confirm that drivers know how to complete a paper log correctly, even if they haven't used one in years. A driver who can't produce a legible paper log during an ELD malfunction will have a difficult roadside inspection.

Motive Electronic Logbook vs. Paper DOT Log Books

Carriers who transitioned from paper dot log books to the motive electronic logbook saw immediate practical differences in their compliance workflow. The comparison isn’t just about compliance; it’s about how much administrative work the ELD eliminates from both the driver’s day and the fleet admin’s week.

Side-by-Side Comparison

FACTOR PAPER DOT LOG BOOK MOTIVE ELECTRONIC LOGBOOK
HOS Recording Manual, driver-entered Automatic via engine data
Driving Time Accuracy Self-reported, error-prone Engine-verified, tamper-evident
Roadside Inspection Officer reviews physical pages App inspection mode, digital transfer
Log Edit Process Manual correction with annotation In-app edit request, admin approval required
Fleet Admin Visibility None until logs are submitted Real-time via admin dashboard
DVIR Separate paper form Integrated into driver app workflow
Violation Detection Manual audit required Automatic flagging in compliance section
Storage and Retrieval Physical storage, manual search Cloud-stored, searchable by date or driver
DOT Audit Preparation Collecting and organizing paper files One-click export from admin dashboard
Co-Driver Logging Separate log books required Co-driver mode in single app

Fleet efficiency gain: A fleet admin auditing compliance for 40 drivers using paper logs would spend hours collecting, organizing, and reviewing physical documents before an audit. The same process in the Motive admin dashboard takes a fraction of that time: filter by driver, set the date range, and export.

The Driver Logbook Experience

For drivers, the driver logbook transition from paper to electronic is mostly a shift in habits. Instead of drawing lines across a paper grid at the end of each day, you tap a duty status button in the app when your status changes. Instead of calculating your remaining hours manually, the app displays them continuously.

The adjustment period is real. New ELD users commonly miss duty status changes in the first few weeks, particularly the switch to On Duty (Not Driving) during stops. Fleet admins who monitor the my logs section in the admin dashboard will see these gaps in the first 30 days and can use them as coaching opportunities before they become violation patterns.

Common ELD Problems and How to Fix Them

Even with a well-configured motive eld system, specific problems come up consistently. These are the most reported issues and how to address them directly.

ELD Device Not Connecting to the App

Confirm the truck ignition is fully on, Bluetooth is enabled on the driver’s phone, and the Motive app has location permission set to “Always” (not just “While Using”). If all three are confirmed and the app still won’t connect, go to Phone Settings > Bluetooth and look for the Motive Gateway in the paired devices list. If it shows as “Not Connected,” tap it to force a reconnect.

If the device doesn’t appear in Bluetooth at all, turn the ignition off, wait 30 seconds, and restart. The Gateway reboots with the ignition cycle.

Logs Not Appearing in the Admin Dashboard

The driver’s logs show correctly in their app, but the fleet admin can’t see them. This is a cellular sync issue between the Gateway and Motive’s servers. Have the driver pull down on the log screen to manually trigger a sync. Check that the driver’s phone has cellular or Wi-Fi connectivity. The app queues log data offline and uploads when the connection is restored.

If logs are still missing after 30 minutes and connectivity is confirmed, submit a support ticket at gomotive.com with the driver name, vehicle, and date range of missing logs.

Unidentified Driving Appearing in the Admin Dashboard

Unidentified driving records appear when the vehicle moves without a driver logged in through the app. This happens when a mechanic moves the truck in the yard, when a driver forgets to log in before moving the vehicle, or when a co-driver doesn’t switch properly in co-driver mode. Unidentified driving that stays unresolved creates compliance exposure during audits. Fleet admins address unidentified driving under Compliance > Unidentified Driving in the Motive dashboard. Assign the trip to the correct driver, or log it as yard movement if that’s accurate. Don’t leave it unresolved.

ELD Malfunction During a Trip

If the Motive Gateway loses connectivity or shows a malfunction indicator mid-trip, the driver must switch to paper logs immediately and annotate the paper log with a note that the ELD is malfunctioning. The driver has eight days to get the device repaired. During that period, paper logs are the compliant method.

Notify your fleet admin as soon as the malfunction is detected. They can track the device status from the admin dashboard and arrange a replacement device if needed.

Additional help: For additional troubleshooting on the driver app side, read our Motive Driver app setup and troubleshooting guide on motivelogin.com.

Manage Your ELD Fleet

Access the Motive admin dashboard to configure ELD devices, assign HOS rule sets, and monitor driver compliance in real time.

Frequently Asked Questions

The Motive ELD is a certified Electronic Logging Device that meets all FMCSA technical specifications required under 49 CFR Part 395. Motive is listed on the FMCSA’s registered ELD provider list. The system consists of the Motive Gateway hardware device, which plugs into the truck’s diagnostic port, and the Motive Driver app, which displays the electronic logbook on the driver’s phone.
How do I log in to the Motive ELD system?
Drivers log in through the Motive Driver app on iOS or Android. Download the app from the App Store or Google Play, open it, tap “Log In,” and enter your Motive account credentials. After logging in, pair the app to the Gateway device in your truck by tapping “Connect to Vehicle.” Fleet admins log in at gomotive.com to access the admin dashboard and compliance reports.
Can I use the Motive ELD on my iPhone?
Yes. The Motive Driver app runs on iPhone (iOS 14.0 or later) and Android (8.0 or later). The app is available as a free download from the App Store. An active Motive account is required to use it. The app pairs with the Motive Gateway device via Bluetooth and displays your full motive electronic logbook on your phone screen.
Is there a free ELD app for Android?
The Motive Driver app is free to download from Google Play. It functions as the eld logbook app for drivers using the Motive system. An active Motive account and a paired Motive Gateway hardware device are required for full ELD compliance. The app download itself has no cost, but the Motive subscription and hardware are paid components of the system.
The keep trucking elog system became the Motive electronic logbook when KeepTruckin rebranded to Motive in 2022. The underlying platform, driver accounts, log history, and ELD hardware all carried over. Drivers who used the KeepTruckin app log in to the Motive Driver app with the same credentials. The elogs login process is the same; only the app name and logo changed.
How does the Motive electronic logbook handle a roadside inspection?
Open the Motive Driver app and tap “DOT Inspection” on the home screen. This puts the app into inspection mode, displaying the current day’s log and the previous seven days in a read-only format. You can hand the device to the officer for review or transfer the logs electronically via web services or email directly from the inspection mode screen.
Who is exempt from the ELD mandate and can still use paper DOT log books?
Short-haul drivers operating within a 150 air-mile radius and returning to their home terminal each day are exempt from the ELD mandate. Drivers operating vehicles manufactured before model year 2000 are also exempt, since those vehicles lack the engine control module data that ELDs require. Driveaway/towaway operations have a separate exemption. All other CDL drivers in interstate commerce subject to HOS rules are generally required to use a certified ELD.
What is the difference between elogs and paper log books for fleet compliance?
Electronic logs generated by a certified motive eld are engine-verified and tamper-evident. They record driving time automatically based on vehicle motion, which removes the opportunity for manual underreporting. Paper dot log books rely entirely on driver self-reporting, which FMCSA research found produced higher rates of HOS violations and inaccuracies. Electronic logs also give fleet admins real-time visibility into driver status and hours, while paper logs provide no visibility until they’re physically submitted.

Conclusion

The motive eld system covers the full compliance requirement: certified hardware, an automatic electronic logbook, real-time fleet visibility from the admin dashboard, and inspection-ready log transfer built into the driver app. Setting it up correctly from the start, assigning the right HOS rule sets, keeping device assignments accurate, and training drivers on inspection mode before they need it at a weigh station, prevents most of the compliance problems that show up later.

For drivers new to the motive electronic logbook, the transition from paper becomes routine within a few weeks. For fleet admins, the move to electronic logging changes compliance audits from a manual paper-sorting exercise into a filtered export from the Motive dashboard.

Log in at gomotive.com to manage your ELD configuration, or read our Motive admin login and fleet dashboard guide on motivelogin.com for a full walkthrough of the admin portal. For driver-side setup help, our Motive Driver app guide covers the complete installation and pairing process.
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