Glossary
Falling Cargo
Falling cargo is freight or load material leaving the vehicle or load area during transport or handling.
Plain-English Meaning
Falling cargo risk is part of the basic securement problem: freight must not leave the vehicle or create a roadway hazard during normal transportation.
Loose pieces, poor containment, door pressure, missing edge protection, damaged tiedowns, and shifting freight can all turn a contained load into a falling-cargo concern.
The review is not limited to open-deck freight. Sealed vans, roll-off containers, crushed vehicles, machinery attachments, and bundled material can all deserve a closer look before movement.
In day-to-day freight work, the safest use of the term is narrow and factual. Confirm the current rule, equipment rating, shipment condition, and company procedure before using any glossary definition for a live securement decision.
Watchouts
- Check loose parts on crushed vehicles and machinery.
- Do not open pressured doors without a safe unloading plan.
- If cargo has shifted against a door or sidewall, treat unloading as a separate safety problem.
Related Terms
Primary Sources / References
Last reviewed:
- FMCSA Cargo Securement Rules Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration · official · reliability: high
- 49 CFR Part 393 Subpart I - Protection Against Shifting and Falling Cargo Electronic Code of Federal Regulations · regulation · reliability: high