FORS Bronze
FORS Bronze is the entry-level accreditation in the Fleet Operator Recognition Scheme. The operator earns it by passing an on-site audit against the current FORS Standard, covering the operator licence, maintenance and defect records, driver management and written policies. Bronze runs for 12 months and is renewed by a fresh on-site audit, not a desk review.
Choose your route
Select the area that best matches your situation.
Home / FORS Accreditation / FORS Bronze
What FORS Bronze requires: the 12 areas audited on site
The audit follows the FORS Standard and groups the evidence into four working areas. Management covers the operator licence, insurance, written health and safety arrangements and the named responsible person. Vehicles covers PMI planning, daily walkaround and defect reporting, MOT history and any contracted maintenance arrangements. Drivers covers DVLA licence checks, health declarations, Driver CPC records, drivers’ hours and tachograph evidence, and signed driver handbook receipts. Operations covers route planning, fuel and emissions data, environmental measures and incident recording.
The named responsible person on the FORS application must hold a completion certificate from a FORS-approved management training course. Drivers need policy briefings backed by signed records that show the briefing took place and was understood. A verbal toolbox talk with no paper trail will not satisfy the auditor.
Written safety, environmental and training policies are expected for operators with five or more vehicles. Smaller operators may explain some points verbally on the day, but written versions are still the safer position because they survive a change of manager or a return visit.
Bronze lasts 12 months and renews through another on-site audit. If the operation changes materially between audits, such as a new operating centre, a significant fleet increase or a change of responsible person, FORS should be notified at the time rather than at renewal.
Why FORS Bronze matters: contracts, compliance and DVSA
Bronze is the minimum accreditation set by Transport for London’s supply chain, by CLOCS on major construction projects and by an increasing number of councils, utilities and main contractors. Operators without it can be excluded from tender lists where Bronze is set as a pre-qualification condition.
The value runs deeper than contract access. The audit examines the same evidence the Traffic Commissioner would expect to see at a public inquiry: an accurate vehicle list against the licence, PMI intervals that match the use of the fleet, defect books with repair sign-offs, driver licence checks at sensible frequencies and a clear chain of management responsibility.
DVSA enforcement officers can see FORS status through industry data. A Green OCRS alongside Bronze accreditation gives a consistent compliance picture and reduces the likelihood of being prioritised for roadside attention.
The FORS Bronze audit: what to expect on the day
The Bronze audit is carried out by an independent FORS auditor at the operating centre. Most visits take two to four hours, depending on fleet size and how well organised the records are. The auditor works through the FORS Standard section by section, asks for documents and records, and may walk the yard to view vehicle condition, the defect book and the notice board.
At the end of the visit the auditor issues a draft report listing any points that did not meet the Standard. These are called non-conformances. Minor non-conformances can usually be cleared by sending corrective evidence within the closure period set by FORS, typically 90 days. Major non-conformances normally require a follow-up visit. Accreditation is confirmed once all non-conformances are closed and FORS approves the final report.
Operators should usually allow four to six weeks from applying to the audit date. Registration is through the FORS Online portal at fors-online.org.uk. Audit fees vary by fleet size and are published by FORS. Many operators use the lead time to organise driver files, finalise written policies and tidy the maintenance records before the auditor arrives.
Useful records and next steps
FORS Bronze: six audit areas at a glance
The six areas every operator must prepare before a FORS Bronze on-site audit. Missing any one of these is logged as a non-conformance and delays accreditation.
Policy owner
Confirm who owns the process and whether that person has authority to fix problems.
Vehicle evidence
Match the written evidence to live vehicle, driver and management records.
Driver training
Check submission, renewal, advert or audit dates before the file is relied on.
Incident review
Make sure the supporting evidence fits the authority or standard being claimed.
Corrective actions
Trace a sample record from report or inspection through to close-out.
Renewal readiness
Record the gap, the owner, the fix and the date it was completed.
Latest Operator Licence Information
Current UK-wide operator licence figures pulled from the live weekly register.
Latest Operator Licence Information
Current UK-wide operator licence snapshot
Live weekly-register figures across mapped UK operator licence regions.
Get help preparing for FORS Bronze
Operator Licence Ltd can review your records against the FORS Standard, identify the gaps most likely to become non-conformances and help you build an audit-ready evidence file before the first visit. We work with operators preparing for their initial Bronze audit and those returning to renewal after a difficult cycle.
FORS Bronze pre-audit checklist
Operator licence. Confirm it is current, the vehicles match the authorised number and the O-licence discs are displayed.
Insurance. Hold a current certificate covering the full fleet, including hired or leased vehicles where they are in use.
Maintenance schedule. Document PMI intervals matched to vehicle age and use. If maintenance is outsourced, request the contractor’s records and keep them on file.
Defect records. Hold at least 12 months of completed daily defect reports with repair sign-offs. Open defects without a closure note are an immediate red flag.
DVLA licence checks. Any driver whose last check is more than 11 months old should be re-checked before the audit.
Driver CPC. Hold each driver’s periodic training record and DQC details. Note any expiry dates falling inside the next audit cycle.
Health declarations. Hold a signed declaration for every driver, dated within the last 12 months.
Driver handbook sign-offs. Keep signed evidence that each driver has read and understood the current handbook, including any recent updates.
Safety, environmental and training policies. Make sure they are written, current and visibly distributed to drivers.
Vehicle safety equipment. Record any required mirrors, cameras, sensors or side under-run protection where contracts or local schemes require them.
Incident recording. Maintain a collision and incident log for the past 12 months, even if it shows nil returns.
Management training. Hold the responsible person’s FORS-approved course certificate on file.
Andrew Logan, Operator Licence Ltd: On the day, the auditor looks for evidence that joins up. The driver file, the DVLA check, the handbook receipt and the tachograph record should all point to the same person doing the same job under the same policy. When one of those is missing or out of date, it usually reveals a wider record-keeping issue rather than a single oversight.
Related FORS Guidance
FORS Silver
The next step after Bronze. Silver requires vehicle safety equipment on HGVs, KPI tracking across fuel, emissions and incidents, and Safe Urban Driving training for drivers.
Covers:
FORS Silver Accreditation
FORS Audit Preparation
How to organise documentation, run a pre-audit driver record review and build the evidence file that gets you through first time.
Covers:
FORS Audit Preparation
FORS Training
Management and driver courses required for FORS accreditation, including the responsible person’s management course needed for Bronze.
Covers:
FORS Training