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Types of Trucking Insurance: The Complete Coverage Guide (2026)
  • By admin  18 Feb, 2026

Types of Trucking Insurance: The Complete Coverage Guide (2026)

By [Ayesha], Licensed Commercial Insurance Specialist  |  Updated: February 2026  |  12 min read

Commercial trucking isn’t like driving a personal vehicle. The risks are bigger, the regulations are stricter, and a single accident can produce a multi-million dollar lawsuit. That’s why trucking insurance isn’t a single policy — it’s a layered system of coverages, each one protecting a different piece of your operation.

Whether you’re a first-time owner-operator trying to figure out what you actually need, a fleet manager reviewing your current policy, or a carrier researching your FMCSA filing requirements, this guide breaks down every type of commercial trucking insurance in plain English — what it covers, who needs it, and what it typically costs.

 

📋  In This Guide

  1. Primary (Trucking) Liability Insurance
  2. Motor Truck Cargo Insurance
  3. Physical Damage Insurance (Collision + Comprehensive)
  4. Bobtail / Non-Trucking Liability Insurance
  5. General Liability Insurance for Trucking
  6. Trucking Umbrella / Excess Liability
  7. Occupational Accident Insurance
  8. Workers’ Compensation for Trucking Companies
  9. Trailer Interchange Insurance
  10. Reefer Breakdown Insurance
  11. Coverage Comparison Table
  12. How to Build Your Trucking Insurance Stack
  13. Frequently Asked Questions

 

 

 

Why Commercial Trucking Requires Multiple Types of Insurance

A personal auto policy covers your car, your liability, and that’s about it. Commercial trucking doesn’t work that way. When you haul freight across state lines, operate a $200,000 semi-truck, and face federal FMCSA regulations, one policy cannot do everything.

The commercial trucking insurance market is designed around specific exposures: the truck itself, the freight inside it, your liability to third parties, your liability when you’re not hauling, and your responsibility to your drivers. Each of these exposures has its own dedicated coverage type — and understanding all of them is the difference between being properly protected and having catastrophic gaps in coverage.

⚠️  Federal Requirement Notice

The FMCSA requires all for-hire motor carriers operating in interstate commerce to carry minimum primary liability insurance.

Limits: $750,000 (general freight) | $1,000,000 (oil/hazardous materials) | $5,000,000 (hazmat/radioactive)

Failure to maintain required filings (Form MCS-90) can result in USDOT operating authority suspension.

 

 

  01    Primary (Trucking) Liability Insurance

The foundational, federally required coverage every commercial truck must carry

Primary liability is the cornerstone of any commercial trucking insurance program. It’s the coverage that protects you financially when your truck is involved in an accident that injures another person or damages someone else’s property — and it’s required by federal law for all for-hire carriers.

Primary trucking liability insurance operates exactly like commercial auto liability: if your driver causes an accident, this coverage pays for the other party’s medical bills, lost wages, vehicle repairs, legal defense costs, and settlements up to your policy limit.

  •       What it covers: Bodily injury to third parties, property damage to third-party vehicles and structures, legal defense and attorney fees
  •       What it does NOT cover: Your own truck (that’s physical damage), your cargo (that’s cargo insurance), or injuries to your own driver (that’s workers comp or occ/acc)
  •       FMCSA minimum limits: $750K – $5M depending on commodity and operating authority
  •       Typical cost: $5,000 – $15,000+ per year per truck depending on driver history, cargo, and route
  •       Who needs it: Every single for-hire commercial truck operating on public roads — no exceptions

✅  Pro Tip

Ask your agent whether your primary liability policy includes a Form MCS-90 endorsement. This federally mandated endorsement guarantees payment to third parties even if your policy has lapsed — and the FMCSA requires it be on file before you can operate legally.

 

  02 Motor Truck Cargo Insurance

Protection for the freight you’re hauling — required by most shippers and brokers

You’re responsible for the freight in your trailer from the moment you take possession of it to the moment it’s delivered. If that cargo is lost, stolen, or damaged while in your care, the shipper or freight broker can hold you financially liable — and the costs can be significant.

Motor truck cargo insurance (also called cargo insurance or freight insurance) covers the goods you’re transporting against loss, damage, theft, and certain accidents. It’s not technically required by federal law, but virtually every shipper and freight broker will require proof of cargo coverage before they load your truck.

  •       What it covers: Theft of cargo, freight damaged in an accident, fire damage, cargo lost due to truck rollover, refrigerated cargo spoilage (with reefer coverage)
  •       What it does NOT cover: Cargo you improperly loaded, certain high-value items (jewelry, electronics, cash), damage caused by manufacturer defect, acts of war
  •       Coverage amounts: Most brokers require $100,000 minimum; high-value freight often requires $250,000 – $500,000+
  •       Typical cost: $1,500 – $4,000+ per year depending on commodity type and routes
  •       Who needs it: All for-hire carriers hauling freight; required by most load boards including DAT and Truckstop

✅  Pro Tip

Different commodities have dramatically different cargo insurance costs. Hauling electronics, pharmaceuticals, or alcohol costs significantly more to insure than general freight. Always disclose your commodity types accurately — misrepresentation can void your coverage at claim time.

 

  03 Physical Damage Insurance

Collision + Comprehensive — covers repairs or replacement of your own truck

Primary liability protects other people from your truck. Physical damage insurance protects your truck itself. If you own a semi that’s worth $80,000, $120,000, or more, a single accident without physical damage coverage could put you out of business overnight.

Physical damage is actually two coverages bundled together: Collision (damage from accidents) and Comprehensive (damage from everything else — theft, fire, hail, vandalism, flood, hitting an animal). Most lenders and lease companies require both if you’re financing your truck.

  •       Collision: Pays to repair or replace your truck after a collision with another vehicle or object
  •       Comprehensive: Covers non-collision events: theft, fire, flood, hail, wind, vandalism, falling objects, hitting a deer
  •       Stated value vs. ACV: Policies pay either stated value (what you agreed the truck is worth) or actual cash value (market value minus depreciation) — understand which yours uses
  •       Deductibles: Typically $1,000 – $5,000; higher deductibles = lower premiums
  •       Typical cost: $2,000 – $6,000 per year per truck for newer vehicles; older trucks cost less
  •       Who needs it: Any owner-operator or fleet with trucks they can’t afford to lose outright — and required by most lenders/lessors

✅  Pro Tip

If your truck is older and fully paid off, run the numbers before buying physical damage. If the truck is worth $15,000 and physical damage costs $2,500/year with a $2,500 deductible, it may not be worth the premium. Work with your agent on this calculation.

 

  04 Bobtail / Non-Trucking Liability Insurance

Coverage for when you’re driving your truck without a load or without dispatch authorization

Here’s a coverage gap that surprises many owner-operators: your primary trucking liability insurance only covers you when you’re operating under a motor carrier’s authority — meaning when you have a loaded trailer and are on a dispatched trip. The moment you unhook that trailer and drive home, or run a personal errand in your truck, your primary liability coverage stops.

That’s exactly what bobtail insurance (also called non-trucking liability or deadhead coverage) addresses. It covers you during those personal-use or non-dispatch moments when your carrier’s primary policy doesn’t apply.

  •       Bobtail insurance: Covers liability when driving your truck WITHOUT a trailer attached
  •       Non-trucking liability: Broader term — covers liability when operating your truck for personal use or between loads, with OR without a trailer
  •       What it does NOT cover: When you’re operating under your motor carrier’s authority (that’s primary liability’s job), or physical damage to your own truck
  •       Typical cost: $400 – $1,200 per year — one of the least expensive coverages in trucking
  •       Who needs it: Owner-operators leased to a carrier who use their truck personally or drive bobtail — if your carrier’s policy doesn’t cover you 24/7, you need this

✅  Pro Tip

Review your lease agreement carefully. Some carriers extend their primary liability coverage to owner-operators even when off dispatch. If yours does, you may not need separate bobtail coverage. If it doesn’t, this is a non-negotiable gap-filler.

 

  05 General Liability Insurance for Trucking

Business liability coverage beyond your truck’s auto policy

Many truckers assume that primary (auto) liability covers all their business liability exposures. It doesn’t. Primary trucking liability covers accidents involving your truck on the road. General liability insurance covers the business liability situations that happen everywhere else.

Consider a few common scenarios: a shipper’s employee trips over your equipment at the loading dock, you accidentally damage a customer’s warehouse door during delivery, a lawsuit claims false advertising in your trucking business materials, or someone is injured at your business premises. None of those are covered by your auto policy. All of them would be covered by commercial general liability.

  •       What it covers: Bodily injury and property damage not involving your vehicle in motion, premises liability, products/completed operations, personal and advertising injury
  •       What it does NOT cover: Auto accidents (that’s primary liability), employee injuries (that’s workers comp), your own property (that’s physical damage)
  •       Typical limits: $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate — most shippers require this
  •       Typical cost: $1,200 – $3,500 per year for small carriers; fleet pricing varies
  •       Who needs it: Any trucking company with employees, a physical business location, or that deals with shippers/brokers who require GL in their contracts — which is most of them

 

  06 Trucking Umbrella / Excess Liability Insurance

Extra liability protection above your primary policy limits when a single accident exceeds your coverage

Nuclear verdicts — jury awards exceeding $10 million — have become increasingly common in trucking litigation. A serious accident involving multiple fatalities can easily generate claims that dwarf a $1 million liability policy. Umbrella and excess liability insurance exist precisely for these catastrophic scenarios.

An umbrella policy sits on top of your primary liability (and often your GL and employers liability) and kicks in once the underlying policy limits are exhausted. It provides a critical financial buffer against runaway litigation that could otherwise destroy a trucking business entirely.

  •       Excess liability: Provides additional limits above a single specific underlying policy
  •       Umbrella: Broader — can sit above multiple underlying policies and may cover some gaps not in primary coverage
  •       Common limits: $1M, $2M, $5M, $10M — purchased in increments above primary limits
  •       Typical cost: $2,000 – $8,000 per year for $1M umbrella; scales with fleet size and safety record
  •       Who needs it: Any carrier doing long-haul interstate freight, fleets with multiple trucks, companies with contracts requiring high limits, or anyone who wants real financial protection

✅  Pro Tip

The trucking litigation landscape has changed dramatically. Settlement and verdict averages for serious trucking accidents have climbed into the millions. Carriers and owner-operators with only minimum liability limits are one bad accident away from personal financial ruin. An umbrella policy is cheap protection against catastrophic loss.

 

  07 Occupational Accident Insurance

Income and medical protection for independent contractor drivers — the alternative to workers’ comp

Most owner-operators and independent contractors (1099 drivers) are not eligible for traditional workers’ compensation insurance — that’s an employee benefit. But that doesn’t mean you have no protection if you’re injured on the job. Occupational accident insurance (occ/acc) fills that gap for independent truckers.

Occ/acc is a voluntary benefit that provides medical expense coverage, disability income, and accidental death benefits if you’re injured while working as a trucker. It’s not a perfect substitute for workers’ comp — it has limits and exclusions — but it’s the best protection available for independent contractors who are ineligible for state workers’ comp systems.

  •       Medical benefits: Pays for accident-related medical expenses up to policy limits (typically $500K – $1M)
  •       Disability income: Weekly income replacement if an injury prevents you from working (typically 70–80% of normal income)
  •       Accidental death & dismemberment: Lump sum payment to beneficiaries in the event of fatal or disabling injuries
  •       What it does NOT cover: Illness (only accidents), pre-existing conditions, injuries that occur off-duty or while intoxicated
  •       Typical cost: $1,500 – $3,500 per year — significantly less than workers’ comp
  •       Who needs it: Owner-operators, leased independent contractors, and 1099 drivers who are not covered under a carrier’s workers’ comp policy

✅  Pro Tip

Many carriers require owner-operators to provide proof of occupational accident coverage before allowing them to lease on. Always check your leasing agreement and confirm whether you need to purchase your own occ/acc policy or if the carrier provides it.

 

  08 Workers’ Compensation for Trucking Companies

Required protection for employees injured on the job — mandatory in most states for motor carriers with employees

If you operate a trucking company with W-2 employees — company drivers, dispatchers, mechanics, or any staff — workers’ compensation insurance is not optional. Most states require it by law, and the FMCSA‘s safety regulations strongly encourage it. Failing to carry workers’ comp when required can result in massive fines, personal liability for the employer, and state operating penalties.

Workers’ compensation covers your employees for injuries sustained while working, regardless of fault. It pays medical bills, partial wage replacement during recovery, rehabilitation costs, and death benefits. It also protects the employer from employee lawsuits related to workplace injuries.

  •       What it covers: Medical expenses for work-related injuries/illness, lost wages during recovery, permanent disability benefits, death and survivor benefits
  •       What it does NOT cover: Injuries sustained while intoxicated, intentional self-harm, injuries that occur outside of employment duties
  •       State requirements: Most states require workers’ comp for any employer with 1–5+ employees; thresholds vary by state
  •       Typical cost: Varies enormously based on driver classification, payroll, and claims history — trucking is a high-hazard classification
  •       Who needs it: Every trucking company with W-2 employees — company drivers, dispatchers, yard workers, mechanics

✅  Pro Tip

Owner-operators with no employees can often legally opt out of workers’ comp in most states and use occupational accident insurance instead — at significant cost savings. Work with your insurance agent and consult your state’s workers’ comp board to confirm your eligibility and requirements.

 

  09 Trailer Interchange Insurance

Coverage for non-owned trailers you’re using under a trailer interchange agreement

In the modern trucking industry, it’s common for carriers to pull trailers owned by other carriers — especially in intermodal operations, drop-and-hook freight, and dedicated lane contracts. When you’re pulling someone else’s trailer, your physical damage policy typically won’t cover damage to that trailer because you don’t own it.

Trailer interchange insurance fills this gap. It provides physical damage coverage for a non-owned trailer while it’s in your possession under a formal trailer interchange agreement. This is a specific type of coverage that applies only when there’s a documented legal exchange of trailers between carriers.

  •       What it covers: Physical damage to a non-owned trailer while in your possession under interchange agreement — collision, comprehensive, and fire/theft
  •       What it does NOT cover: Trailers you’re using without a formal interchange agreement (that’s non-owned trailer coverage), cargo inside the trailer, or your own trailer
  •       Non-owned trailer vs. trailer interchange: Non-owned trailer insurance covers trailers in your possession without a formal interchange agreement; trailer interchange requires a documented agreement
  •       Typical limits: $25,000 – $75,000 per trailer
  •       Typical cost: $500 – $2,000 per year
  •       Who needs it: Carriers involved in trailer interchange programs — commonly used in intermodal, LTL, and fleet operations with formal trailer swap agreements

 

  10 Reefer Breakdown Insurance

Specialized coverage for refrigerated units — protects against cargo spoilage due to mechanical failure

Refrigerated freight — food, pharmaceuticals, medical supplies, floral, and other temperature-sensitive goods — represents a premium segment of trucking. But hauling reefer freight comes with a specialized risk that standard cargo insurance doesn’t cover: mechanical breakdown of the refrigeration unit itself.

Standard cargo insurance covers cargo damage from accidents, theft, and fire. But if your refrigeration unit breaks down mid-route and your load of produce or frozen goods spoils, that’s typically excluded from standard cargo coverage. Reefer breakdown insurance specifically addresses this gap.

  •       What it covers: Cargo spoilage or damage caused by mechanical or electrical breakdown of the refrigeration unit (reefer), temperature deviation due to mechanical failure, fuel runout (with some policies)
  •       What it does NOT cover: Standard cargo damage from accidents or theft (that’s separate cargo insurance), spoilage caused by improper loading temperature, pre-existing cargo contamination
  •       How it works: Usually purchased as an endorsement to your existing cargo policy or as a standalone reefer breakdown rider
  •       Typical cost: $500 – $2,500 per year depending on cargo value and territory
  •       Who needs it: Any trucker hauling perishable goods — produce, frozen foods, dairy, pharmaceuticals, flowers, or any temperature-controlled freight

✅  Pro Tip

Always document pre-trip reefer pre-cooling, continuous temperature logs during transit, and post-delivery temperature records. In a reefer breakdown claim, thorough documentation is the difference between a paid claim and a disputed one.

 

 

 

Trucking Insurance Coverage Comparison Table

Use the table below to quickly identify which coverages apply to your operation:

 

Coverage Type What It Protects Required? Avg. Annual Cost Owner-Op Needed?
Primary Liability Others injured/property damaged by your truck Yes (FMCSA) $5K–$15K+ Yes
Motor Truck Cargo Freight you’re hauling Contractually required $1.5K–$4K Yes (if for-hire)
Physical Damage Your truck (collision + comprehensive) If financed $2K–$6K Recommended
Bobtail / NTL Your liability off-dispatch No (but critical gap) $400–$1.2K If leased to carrier
General Liability Premises & non-auto business liability Often contractual $1.2K–$3.5K Recommended
Umbrella / Excess Extra liability above primary limits No (but wise) $2K–$8K Recommended
Occupational Accident Your injuries as an IC (1099) No (replaces WC) $1.5K–$3.5K If no WC coverage
Workers’ Compensation Employee injuries Yes if W-2 employees Varies by payroll If you have employees
Trailer Interchange Non-owned trailer physical damage Per interchange agreement $500–$2K If pulling others’ trailers
Reefer Breakdown Spoilage from reefer unit failure No (reefer carriers only) $500–$2.5K If hauling perishables

 

 

 

How to Build Your Trucking Insurance Coverage Stack

Now that you understand each coverage type, the natural question is: which ones do I actually need? The answer depends on your operation type, truck ownership, business structure, and the freight you haul. Here’s a practical framework:

 

For New Owner-Operators Leased to a Carrier

When you’re leased to a motor carrier, their primary liability insurance typically covers your truck while you’re on dispatch. But there are still critical gaps you need to fill yourself:

  •       Primary Liability — covered by carrier while on dispatch (confirm in your lease agreement)
  •       Motor Truck Cargo — check if the carrier’s cargo policy covers your loads or if you need your own
  •       Physical Damage — you almost certainly need this; the carrier’s policy does NOT cover your truck
  •       Bobtail / Non-Trucking Liability — required when driving off dispatch
  •       Occupational Accident — the carrier likely doesn’t provide this; purchase your own

 

For Owner-Operators Under Their Own Authority

Operating under your own MC authority means you’re responsible for everything. A complete coverage stack looks like this:

  •       Primary Liability — required; you’re the carrier
  •       Motor Truck Cargo — required for virtually all loads
  •       Physical Damage — required if your truck is financed; strongly recommended otherwise
  •       General Liability — required by most shippers and brokers
  •       Umbrella / Excess Liability — strongly recommended given litigation trends
  •       Occupational Accident — if you have no employees
  •       Workers’ Compensation — if you have W-2 drivers
  •       Reefer Breakdown — only if hauling temperature-sensitive goods
  •       Trailer Interchange — only if involved in trailer interchange programs

 

For Small Fleet Owners (2–10 Trucks)

Fleet operations add complexity. You’re responsible for multiple trucks, multiple drivers, and potentially a mix of company drivers and leased owner-operators. Your coverage stack should include:

  •       Primary Liability — fleet auto policy covering all power units
  •       Motor Truck Cargo — fleet cargo policy
  •       Physical Damage — for all owned trucks (and possibly non-owned vehicles)
  •       General Liability — a business policy covering all operations
  •       Workers’ Compensation — required for all W-2 drivers
  •       Umbrella / Excess Liability — critical at fleet level; litigation exposure multiplies with fleet size
  •       Employer’s Practices Liability — consider if you have significant employee headcount

 

🔑  Key Takeaways

✔  Primary liability is legally required — there’s no operation without it.

✔  Cargo insurance is required by almost every shipper and freight broker.

✔  Physical damage protects your most valuable business asset — your truck.

✔  Bobtail coverage closes the gap when you’re off dispatch.

✔  Occupational accident is the independent contractor’s substitute for workers’ compensation.

✔  Umbrella coverage is the most underused protection against catastrophic, business-ending verdicts.

✔  Reefer breakdown and trailer interchange are specialty coverages for specific operations.

 

 

 

5 Most Common Trucking Insurance Coverage Mistakes

⚠️  Avoid These Costly Coverage Gaps

  1. Assuming the carrier’s policy covers you all the time — it usually only applies when you’re on dispatch.
  2. Skipping physical damage because it’s optional — one totaled truck can end your business.
  3. Not disclosing your real cargo — misrepresentation voids coverage when you need it most.
  4. Carrying minimum liability limits in a nuclear verdict environment — $750K is not enough.
  5. Forgetting to update your policy when you change cargo types, routes, or add a truck.

 

 

 

Understanding Key Trucking Insurance Terms

Trucking insurance comes with its own vocabulary. Here are the most important terms you’ll encounter when shopping for coverage:

 

Term What It Means
FMCSA Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration — the agency that regulates interstate trucking and sets minimum insurance requirements
Form MCS-90 A mandatory endorsement filed with the FMCSA confirming your carrier meets minimum liability requirements
BMC-91 / BMC-91X FMCSA forms filed by insurance companies confirming continuous liability coverage to the federal government
Motor Carrier Authority Your federal operating license (MC number) — required for interstate for-hire trucking
USDOT Number Your unique identifier in the FMCSA system — required before you can apply for MC authority
Deductible The amount you pay out of pocket before insurance coverage kicks in — higher deductibles = lower premiums
Primary Liability Auto liability coverage that applies while you’re operating as a for-hire carrier on dispatch
Non-Trucking Liability Liability coverage that applies when your truck is being used for personal, non-business purposes
Stated Value The agreed dollar amount your truck is insured for — no depreciation calculation at claim time
Actual Cash Value (ACV) Market value of your truck at the time of loss, factoring in depreciation — can be significantly less than what you paid
Loss Payee A party (typically a lender) listed on your physical damage policy to receive claim payments for a financed vehicle
Named Insured The person or entity whose name is on the policy and who holds the coverage rights
Combined Single Limit (CSL) A single liability limit that applies to both bodily injury and property damage combined — common in trucking policies
CSA Score Compliance, Safety, Accountability score — FMCSA’s rating system that directly impacts your insurance eligibility and premiums

 

 

 

Frequently Asked Questions About Trucking Insurance Coverage Types

 

What is the most important type of trucking insurance?

Primary liability insurance is the most critical because it’s federally required and covers the largest financial exposure — injury and property damage to third parties. Without it, you cannot legally operate as a for-hire carrier. However, cargo insurance is equally important commercially because most shippers and brokers require it before they’ll work with you.

 

Do I need all 10 types of trucking insurance?

No. The coverages you need depend on your specific operation. Every for-hire trucker needs primary liability and cargo insurance. Physical damage is essential if your truck is financed. After that, your needs depend on whether you’re leased or under your own authority, whether you have employees, and what type of freight you haul. Work with a licensed trucking insurance specialist to identify your exact exposure profile.

 

What’s the difference between bobtail insurance and non-trucking liability?

Bobtail insurance specifically covers you when driving your truck without a trailer (the ‘bobtail’ position). Non-trucking liability is broader — it covers you when using your truck for personal purposes, whether or not you have a trailer attached. The key distinction is that both apply only when you’re NOT operating under a motor carrier’s authority. Check which term your state and carrier use, as they’re often used interchangeably.

 

Can I get all my trucking coverages in one policy?

Many insurance companies offer ‘trucking insurance packages’ that bundle primary liability, physical damage, and cargo together. However, some specialty coverages like occupational accident and workers’ compensation are always separate. A package policy can simplify administration and sometimes offer pricing advantages, but always verify that each coverage in the package has the limits you actually need rather than assuming one price covers everything adequately.

 

How does my CSA score affect which coverages I can get?

A high CSA score (indicating poor safety performance) doesn’t just affect pricing — it can affect availability. Carriers with high-risk BASIC scores may find that standard insurance companies won’t write their policy at all, pushing them into the excess and surplus lines (E&S) market where premiums are significantly higher and coverage terms may be less favorable. Maintaining clean safety records and managing your CSA score is one of the most powerful tools for controlling insurance costs long-term.

 

What is the cheapest way to get all required trucking coverages?

The cheapest approach varies based on your operation, but general strategies include: maintaining a clean driving record and CSA score, installing and using ELD and dashcam technology (which can earn discounts), choosing higher deductibles on physical damage, bundling coverages with a single carrier, working with a specialist trucking insurance broker who has access to multiple markets, and completing defensive driving or safety training programs that qualify for premium credits.

 

 

 

The Bottom Line: Build Your Coverage Stack Before You Need It

Commercial trucking insurance isn’t a commodity you buy once and forget. It’s a dynamic protection system that should evolve as your business grows — more trucks, more drivers, higher-value freight, and new contractual requirements all change what you need.

Start with what’s required: primary liability and cargo. Add physical damage to protect your equipment. Fill the gaps with bobtail, general liability, and occupational accident based on your operating structure. Then layer in umbrella coverage to protect against the lawsuits that can end a trucking business overnight.

The best thing you can do is work with a licensed commercial trucking insurance specialist — not a general insurance agent — who understands the industry, knows the FMCSA regulations, and has access to multiple markets that write trucking risks. The right coverage at the right price starts with the right advisor.

 

Have questions about your specific coverage needs? Contact a licensed trucking insurance specialist today for a free coverage review and quote comparison.