PBIA
Roadside inspection site in Florida • 14 inspections on record
PBIA is a roadside inspection site in Florida where state law-enforcement officers conduct commercial-vehicle inspections under the federal Motor Carrier Safety Assistance Program (MCSAP). Last recorded inspection: Nov 14, 2023. Use this page to see how often the site is active, what violations inspectors most often cite, which carriers come through, and how the out-of-service rate compares to the state average.
Possibly dormant or seasonal
No FMCSA inspections have been recorded at PBIA in the last 90 days. The site may be seasonal, temporarily closed, or unstaffed. Check with the state DOT or commercial-vehicle enforcement office before relying on current activity levels.
- Name:
- PBIA
- State:
- Florida (FL)
- Total Inspections:
- 14
- Active Since:
- Apr 13, 2023
- Latest Inspection:
- Nov 14, 2023
Ranks 777th by inspection volume in Florida.
About This Inspection Site
PBIA is a roadside inspection location in Florida where FMCSA-certified inspectors conduct safety inspections of commercial motor vehicles under the Motor Carrier Safety Assistance Program (MCSAP). This site has conducted 14 recorded inspections from Apr 13, 2023 to Nov 14, 2023 .
A total of 6 unique carriers have been inspected at this site. The average number of violations per inspection is 0.2.
Inspections follow CVSA (Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance) North American Standard procedures and may include weight checks, credential verification, mechanical inspection, hours-of-service compliance review, and hazardous materials documentation checks. Vehicles or drivers that fail critical safety criteria are placed out of service until deficiencies are corrected.
Reported inspection-feed labels
Raw FMCSA reported-location label that have been recorded against this canonical inspection site. Each link opens the audit/evidence cluster page for that label — every inspection FMCSA filed under that exact reported text, in the Florida inspection feed. For the deep canonical-station view, you're already here.
Peer Stations in Florida
Stations of similar inspection volume — useful for comparing OOS rates and operating patterns.
Carriers Inspected
Showing 6 of 6 (page 1 of 1)
| Carrier | Inspections ▼ |
|---|---|
|
THE HERTZ CORPORATION
ESTERO, FL
|
4 |
|
BUDGET RENT A CAR SYSTEM INC
PARSIPPANY, NJ
|
4 |
|
AVIS RENT A CAR SYSTEM LLC
PARSIPPANY, NJ
|
3 |
|
ABM AVIATION INC
ATLANTA, GA
|
1 |
|
ENTERPRISE LEASING COMPANY OF FLORIDA LLC
COCONUT CREEK, FL
|
1 |
|
SIXT RENT A CAR LLC
FORT LAUDERDALE, FL
|
1 |
Recent Inspections
14 inspections at this site (page 1 of 1)
How to use station-level data
- Note the station's typical activity hours. Use the activity heatmap on this page to see when PBIA has historically been most heavily staffed. FMCSA does not publish official hours, so the inspection record is the closest proxy.
- Check what level of inspection typically happens here. The Inspection Level Breakdown shows what mix of CVSA Level I, II, III, IV, V, and VI inspections this site runs. Expect the level-mix at the next visit to look similar.
- Review the most-cited violation codes. Codes that show up most often in the Top Violations table tell you what inspectors at this station focus on — often brake-system, lighting, tire, or hours-of-service items. These are the inspectors' hot buttons.
- Pre-trip your truck against those specific codes. Walk-around the tractor and trailer and physically verify each item the top codes describe. A 5-minute pre-trip aligned to this station's hot codes is far more efficient than a generic checklist.
- Track your own inspection history at /usdot/{your-USDOT}/inspections/. After every inspection, confirm the report shows up on your USDOT profile within 30 days. Disputes (DataQs) must be filed against your own record, not the station's.
Frequently asked questions about PBIA
What kind of inspections happen at PBIA? ▾
How many trucks have been inspected here? ▾
What's the out-of-service rate at this station? ▾
Where exactly is this station located? ▾
When is this station typically active? ▾
What violations are most commonly cited here? ▾
Can I avoid this station? ▾
How does this station compare to others in Florida? ▾
About FMCSA inspection stations
FMCSA inspection stations — sometimes called weigh stations, scales, or ports of entry — are the physical points where state law-enforcement officers stop commercial motor vehicles to conduct safety inspections, weight checks, and credential verification. The federal Motor Carrier Safety Assistance Program (MCSAP) funds the inspector workforce; the Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance (CVSA) defines the inspection-level standards (Levels I through VI). Every report becomes part of FMCSA's national inspection file, which is what TruckCodex mirrors here.
A station's "OOS rate" — out-of-service rate — measures the share of inspections that ended with the vehicle, driver, or both placed out of service. A high OOS rate doesn't necessarily mean the inspectors are stricter; more often it reflects the population of carriers passing through the corridor. A low OOS rate often means the station is on a route used by larger, well-maintained fleets running regular pre-trip programs.
TruckCodex is not affiliated with the FMCSA, MCSAP, CVSA, or any state DOT. Every station record on this site is sourced from the public FMCSA inspection file and refreshed daily. We do not publish staffed hours, schedule changes, or upcoming enforcement details — those would not be public to begin with. For the live status of any specific station, contact the operating state's commercial-vehicle enforcement bureau.
Related
Data sources & freshness
TruckCodex aggregates official public-sector datasets. See the Source registry for dataset-level coverage and the Freshness log for last-import timestamps.
Census, SAFER, SMS, Licensing & Insurance (L&I), roadside inspections, crashes, and authority history.
Vehicle recall campaigns, defect investigations, and consumer safety complaints (SCRS).
Cross-border carrier registry and Canadian recall campaigns where applicable.
TruckCodex is an independent aggregator; it is not affiliated with FMCSA, NHTSA, EIA, or Transport Canada. Always verify compliance-critical information directly with the originating agency.