Medically reviewed by Dr. Alan M. Tebby, D.C., FMCSA Certified Medical Examiner | Last updated: January 22, 2026
TL;DR: DOT Physical Vertigo Vestibular Disorders
DOT physical vertigo vestibular disorders certification depends on the specific condition and its impact on driving safety. BPPV (benign paroxysmal positional vertigo) that has been treated is usually certifiable. Ménière’s disease with frequent unpredictable attacks may be disqualifying. Vestibular disorders that are well-controlled, have predictable triggers, or provide warning symptoms are often certifiable. The key concern is whether sudden vertigo could cause loss of vehicle control. At Charlotte DOT Exam Center, we evaluate vestibular conditions for commercial driving fitness. Call 704-544-3494. $70 flat rate.
Understanding Vestibular Disorders and Commercial Driving
Vestibular disorders affect the inner ear and brain’s balance system, causing symptoms like vertigo (spinning sensation), dizziness, imbalance, and nausea. For commercial drivers, these conditions are concerning because sudden severe vertigo could impair the ability to safely control a commercial motor vehicle.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration evaluates vestibular disorders under 49 CFR 391.41(b)(8), which addresses conditions likely to cause “loss of consciousness or any loss of ability to control a commercial motor vehicle.” While vertigo doesn’t cause unconsciousness, severe episodes can certainly cause loss of vehicle control.
However, many vestibular conditions are treatable, have predictable triggers, or occur infrequently—making certification possible for many affected drivers. The evaluation focuses on the specific condition, its severity, treatment status, and likelihood of sudden incapacitating episodes while driving.
Common Vestibular Disorders and DOT Certification
Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV)
The most common vestibular disorder:
- Cause: Displaced calcium crystals in inner ear
- Trigger: Specific head positions (looking up, rolling over)
- Duration: Brief episodes, usually under 1 minute
- Treatment: Epley maneuver—highly effective
- Certification outlook: Excellent after treatment
Ménière’s Disease
Inner ear disorder with episodic vertigo:
- Symptoms: Vertigo attacks, hearing loss, tinnitus, ear fullness
- Duration: Episodes last 20 minutes to several hours
- Frequency: Variable—weeks to months between attacks
- Warning: Some people have aura (ear fullness, tinnitus increase)
- Certification outlook: Challenging; depends on control
Vestibular Neuritis/Labyrinthitis
Inner ear inflammation, usually viral:
- Presentation: Acute severe vertigo lasting days to weeks
- Recovery: Most recover fully; some have residual imbalance
- Recurrence: Uncommon after resolution
- Certification: Usually certifiable after recovery
Vestibular Migraine
Migraine-associated dizziness and vertigo:
- Symptoms: Vertigo with or without headache
- Treatment: Migraine prevention medications
- Certification: Depends on frequency and predictability
See also our guide on migraines and headaches.
Superior Canal Dehiscence Syndrome
Abnormal opening in inner ear bone:
- Triggers: Loud sounds, pressure changes, straining
- Treatment: Surgery available for severe cases
- Certification: Depends on symptom severity and triggers
FMCSA Requirements for Vestibular Disorders
Certification Criteria
Medical examiners evaluate vestibular conditions based on:
- Sudden incapacitation risk: Could vertigo occur without warning while driving?
- Episode frequency: How often do symptoms occur?
- Triggers: Are episodes triggered by specific, avoidable situations?
- Warning symptoms: Is there time to safely stop driving?
- Treatment status: Has the condition been treated effectively?
- Stability: Is the condition stable or worsening?
Generally Certifiable
- BPPV successfully treated with repositioning maneuvers
- Vestibular neuritis with complete recovery
- Vestibular disorders with predictable, avoidable triggers
- Conditions with adequate warning symptoms
- Surgical correction of vestibular disorders
Potentially Disqualifying
- Active Ménière’s disease with frequent unpredictable attacks
- Recurrent severe vertigo without warning
- Drop attacks (Tumarkin’s crisis)
- Untreated or uncontrolled vestibular conditions
- Significant persistent imbalance affecting function

BPPV and DOT Physical Certification
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo has the best certification outlook among vestibular disorders:
Why BPPV Is Often Certifiable
- Position-triggered: Vertigo only occurs with specific head movements
- Brief episodes: Typically 30-60 seconds
- Highly treatable: Epley maneuver resolves most cases
- Low driving risk: Triggering positions uncommon while driving
Certification After BPPV Treatment
- Successfully treated BPPV is generally certifiable
- Document treatment with Epley or other repositioning maneuver
- Confirm resolution of symptoms
- Be aware of potential recurrence (about 15% per year)
Untreated or Recurrent BPPV
- Active untreated BPPV may require treatment before certification
- Recurrent BPPV may need ongoing management documentation
- Self-treatment techniques (Brandt-Daroff exercises) can be learned
Ménière’s Disease and DOT Certification
Ménière’s disease is more challenging for certification due to its unpredictable nature:
Certification Challenges
- Unpredictable attacks: May occur without warning
- Incapacitating symptoms: Severe vertigo, nausea, inability to function
- Variable frequency: Attack patterns differ among individuals
- Progressive hearing loss: May affect communication
Factors Favoring Certification
- Long attack-free intervals (months to years)
- Prodromal warning symptoms (aural fullness, tinnitus change)
- Good response to treatment (diet, diuretics, injections)
- Surgical treatment that eliminated vertigo
- Burnout phase (vestibular function loss, vertigo resolved)
Treatment and Certification
- Dietary changes: Low-salt diet may reduce attacks
- Diuretics: May decrease frequency
- Intratympanic steroids: May provide relief
- Gentamicin injections: Chemical labyrinthectomy
- Surgery: Labyrinthectomy or vestibular nerve section—eliminates vertigo
Post-surgical patients who have recovered from vestibular ablation are often certifiable once balance compensation has occurred.
Other Vestibular Conditions
Post-Viral Vestibular Dysfunction
Recovery after vestibular neuritis or labyrinthitis:
- Most patients compensate and recover fully
- Vestibular rehabilitation accelerates recovery
- Certification appropriate after complete recovery
- Some mild residual imbalance may be acceptable
Perilymphatic Fistula
- Abnormal communication between inner and middle ear
- Symptoms with pressure changes, straining, or loud sounds
- Surgical repair available
- Certification depends on symptoms and repair status
Bilateral Vestibular Loss
- Loss of vestibular function in both ears
- Causes oscillopsia (visual instability with head movement)
- Significant balance impairment
- Generally disqualifying; may consider with extensive compensation
Central Vestibular Disorders
Required Documentation for Vestibular Disorders
Basic Documentation
- Specific diagnosis (not just “dizziness” or “vertigo”)
- Date of onset and course of illness
- Current symptom status
- Treatment received and response
- Date of last vertigo episode
Specialist Documentation
ENT, neurotology, or audiology input may include:
- Vestibular function testing (VNG, caloric testing, rotary chair)
- Audiogram if hearing affected
- Assessment of vertigo risk
- Statement regarding fitness for commercial driving
For Ménière’s Disease
- Attack frequency log
- Warning symptoms if present
- Treatment history and compliance
- Hearing status
- ENT or neurotology clearance letter
FAQs: DOT Physical Vertigo Vestibular Disorders
Can I get a CDL if I have vertigo?
It depends on the cause and control of your vertigo. BPPV that has been treated is usually certifiable. Other causes of vertigo require individual evaluation based on frequency, severity, predictability, and treatment response.
I had BPPV that was treated. Can I be certified?
Yes, successfully treated BPPV is generally certifiable. Bring documentation of your diagnosis and treatment. Be aware that BPPV can recur, but recurrence can usually be treated again with repositioning maneuvers.
Will Ménière’s disease disqualify me from commercial driving?
Not necessarily. Ménière’s disease that is well-controlled, in remission, or has been surgically treated may be certifiable. Active Ménière’s with frequent unpredictable attacks is typically disqualifying until better controlled.
Do I need to see a specialist for vertigo before my DOT physical?
For ongoing or complex vestibular conditions, specialist evaluation is usually required. For resolved conditions like successfully treated BPPV, documentation of treatment may be sufficient.
What if I get dizzy during my DOT physical?
Active dizziness during the examination will likely result in deferral until the condition is evaluated and treated. You should be symptom-free at the time of your examination.
Are vertigo medications disqualifying?
Vestibular suppressant medications like meclizine can cause drowsiness. Taking these medications regularly during driving hours may be problematic. Occasional use for acute episodes that occur off-duty may be acceptable.
Key Takeaways: DOT Physical Vertigo Vestibular Disorders
- Diagnosis matters: Different conditions have different certification outlooks
- BPPV favorable: Treated BPPV is usually certifiable
- Ménière’s challenging: Requires demonstration of control or treatment
- Sudden incapacitation key concern: Could vertigo occur without warning?
- Treatment effectiveness counts: Well-controlled conditions may certify
- Surgical options: Vestibular ablation can eliminate vertigo permanently
- Specialist input often needed: ENT or neurotology evaluation helpful
Charlotte DOT Exam Center Location
Address
Charlotte DOT Exam Center
8415 Pineville-Matthews Road, Suite 102
Charlotte, NC 28226
Phone: 704-544-3494
Hours
Monday-Friday: 8:30am – 5:00pm
Saturday: 8:30am – 12:00pm
Walk-Ins Welcome
Vertigo or Balance Issues? Get Evaluated
Charlotte DOT Exam Center evaluates vestibular conditions for commercial driving fitness.
$70 Flat Rate • Walk-Ins Welcome • Same-Day Certification

I am the administrator for the Charlotte DOT Exam facility, located in Charlotte NC. I oversee the facility services providing DOT exams in accordance with the standards of the FMCSA. We also provide DOT drug testing with MRO support when required. Drug testing can also be done for non-DOT exams such as pre-employment. In order to minimize wait times, I always encourage our clients to contact us first and make an appointment.
I would also suggest that each individual wanting to test for the CDL health card read the article “Preparing For Your DOT Exam” as it lists several things to bring to the test, such as CPAP usage reports and medicine lists.













