Get a quote on Commercial Auto Insurance
What is commercial auto insurance?
Commercial auto insurance is liability and physical damage protection that covers vehicles used for business purposes. If your financial services business owns vehicles titled in the business name, then commercial auto insurance will be required in most states.
Who needs commercial auto insurance?
Your financial services business will need commercial auto insurance if it owns or leases vehicles titled in the name of the business. Most states require every vehicle registered in the state to have minimum levels of liability insurance. In addition, some states also require coverage for uninsured and underinsured motorists. Collision and comprehensive coverages are optional.
As a business owner, you may need commercial auto insurance for vehicles owned, leased, or titled in your personal name if the vehicle is:
- Used for business purposes such as running errands or transporting clients
- Driven by employees, co-workers, clients or volunteers
What types of vehicles are eligible?
Commercial auto insurance can cover a wide range of vehicle types, from cars to large trucks, but for a financial services business, you’ll likely just need coverage for cars, SUVs, or vans. Commercial auto insurance is available for small businesses with single vehicles up to businesses with large fleets of vehicles.
What does commercial auto insurance cover?
Commercial auto insurance includes both liability and property insurance coverage. The property coverage provides protection from damage to your company’s vehicles, including both crashes and theft. The liability coverage covers your business from financial repercussions related to vehicle usage. The liability coverage will protect you for crashes caused by you or your employees, damage to others’ vehicles, or bodily injury. It also covers medical bills, repair costs, or funeral expenses due to crashes.
Example: One of your employees is on their way to a business meeting in a company car and runs a red light, crashing into another vehicle. The car they struck was damaged, and the other driver broke their wrist. Your company’s policy would cover repairs to the other driver’s car, medical expenses, and any legal fees if they decided to sue.
Commercial Auto Liability
The liability component of commercial auto insurance consists of bodily injury liability and property damage liability. This coverage protects your business if you or one of your employees causes injury or damage to another party while driving and are deemed to be at fault for the crash. The insurer will also help pay for the legal fees to defend your business in court.
Some insurance policies, rather than covering bodily injury and property damage separately, combine the two coverages together into a combined single limit liability coverage. Your coverage will either have both bodily injury liability and property damage liability, or only combined single limit liability.
Most states require all registered vehicles to have minimum bodily injury and property damage liability coverage.
- Bodily Injury Liability provides coverage for your business if you or your employee is at fault for causing a crash that physically injures pedestrians, drivers or passengers in other vehicles, or passengers in your vehicle. Expenses covered include medical expenses, legal fees, loss of income, pain and suffering, and funeral costs. Usually, there are separate limits “per person” and “per accident”, and the limits are usually expressed per person/per accident.
Example: The per person/per accident limit you’ve secured for your financial advising business is $50,000/$150,000. Your employee crashes into another car while driving a company-owned car and is found to be at fault for the accident. The three occupants of the other vehicle are seriously injured and sue your business. The insurer will pay up to $50,000 in damages to each of the occupants, with a maximum of $150,000 total paid out.
- Property Damage Liability provides coverage if you are at fault for a crash while driving and damage others’ property. The property can be another vehicle or any other property, such as a building or fence.
Commercial Auto Property
The property component of commercial auto insurance protects the value of your vehicle.
- Collision coverage pays for physical and mechanical damage to your vehicle when it hits or is hit by an object or another vehicle.
Example: You are driving a client to a meeting, and you crash your company car into a wall. Collision coverage would pay you for the cost to repair your vehicle. If the cost of repairing your vehicle exceeds the value of the vehicle before the crash, collision coverage would pay you the pre-crash value of your vehicle.
- Comprehensive physical damage coverage pays for the loss of your vehicle if it is stolen or damage to your vehicle from perils such as theft, vandalism, falling objects, fire, glass breakage, and flooding.
Example: During visit to a client’s office, your company car gets is damaged by a fallen tree branch. Comprehensive coverage would pay you the cost to repair your vehicle, or if it is not repairable, comprehensive would pay you the value of your van before the branch fell on it.
Uninsured and Underinsured Motorist Coverage
Uninsured and Underinsured Motorist Coverage is required in some states, and it may cost more in states with a higher number of uninsured drivers.
- Uninsured Motorist Coverage protects you in the case that a driver with no insurance damages your company-owned vehicle or causes injuries to your driver or other passengers. Even though the other driver is at fault, with no insurance, they may be unable to pay for any injuries or damage sustained to your vehicle. This is where uninsured motorist coverage would step in.
- Underinsured Motorist Coverage protects you in the same case, where your driver is not at fault, but instead of the offending driver having no insurance, they do have insurance but don’t have a high enough liability limit to cover all the costs for damage or medical expenses. Underinsured motorist coverage would step in to fill the gap.
Medical Payments Coverage
Medical payments is a no-fault coverage. Regardless of who is at fault for the accident, the coverage will provide payments for medical and funeral expenses for the driver and passengers in your vehicle. Medical payments coverage usually has a lower limit of liability, which is around $10,000-$30,000. This coverage can be added to a Commercial Auto Insurance policy through an endorsement.
What doesn’t commercial auto insurance cover?
Commercial auto insurance does not cover employees who drive their personal cars for business purposes. Businesses who have employees driving personal cars for business errands, or who hire or rent vehicles for business use should purchase Hired & Non-Owned auto insurance, in addition to their commercial auto coverage. Hired & Non-Owned auto insurance is also available for companies that do not own vehicles or do not need commercial auto coverage.
Hired & Non-Owned Auto is important for businesses that:
- Have employees who drive their personal vehicles for business purposes, such as driving from one client office to another office. If your employees are only commuting from home to an office, you do not need Hired & Non-Owned auto coverage.
- Hire livery cars to pick up or drive around clients
- Send employees on business trips where they rent vehicles
Example: Your employee is transporting a client to their office. Instead of using the company car, he takes his personal car. On the way to the site, he hits a pedestrian. In this scenario, Hired and Non-Owned auto insurance would cover any medical or legal costs associated with the accident.
Hired & Non-Owned auto does not cover commuting from home to work or any personal errands in vehicles your company does not own.
How much does commercial auto insurance cost?
The cost of commercial auto insurance depends on a number of factors, including the type of business you run, type and number of vehicles needing insurance, as well as coverage types. While the range of pricing can vary widely, most small business owners can expect to pay annual premiums between $750 and $1,200 per vehicle.
How much commercial auto insurance do I need?
For many businesses, a minimum of $500,000-$1 million in commercial auto liability is appropriate. To supplement this liability, a Commercial Umbrella policy may also be appropriate to provide strong protection for your business.