Truck Insurance Basics
Truck Insurance Basics: what you need, what it covers, and what brokers check.
Insurance isn’t just “a premium” — it’s a set of coverages, limits, exclusions, and paperwork that can make or break your ability to book freight. This guide explains the common policies (auto liability, cargo, physical damage, general liability, trailer interchange), how certificates work, and the mistakes that trigger claim denials or load cancellations.
- Know which coverages are required vs commonly requested by brokers/shippers.
- Read your limits correctly (per occurrence vs aggregate) and choose deductibles that won’t wreck cash flow.
- Handle COIs the right way: additional insured, waivers, and who should receive the certificate.
- Avoid claim killers: late reporting, improper securement notes, and mismatched equipment/trailer terms.
Truck Insurance Basics: What You Need, What It Covers, and How to Stop Overpaying
Truck insurance is not “one policy” — it’s a stack. The stack protects (1) the public, (2) your equipment, (3) the freight, and (4) your business from the gaps that kill small carriers: wrong filings, wrong endorsements, or slow claims response.
This briefing breaks down the coverage stack, FMCSA minimums + filings, a clean new-authority timeline, a practical MCS-90 explainer, and a claims survival pack you can hand to a driver today. Educational content only (not legal/financial advice).
Related (internal): DOT Audit Guide • CSA Scores • Clearinghouse • Carrier Onboarding
The insurance stack (what each policy actually does)
Buy coverage by function — not by buzzword. Every policy below solves a different “how do I not go out of business?” problem.
Pays for bodily injury/property damage to others from your truck operations. This is the “authority stays alive” policy.
Protects the freight you haul. Often required by brokers/shippers even when federal cargo requirements are $0 for many property carriers.
Protects your tractor/trailer from damage and theft. Required by lenders. Your asset policy — not public liability.
Non-auto business liability (yard incidents, premises, certain operations). Not a substitute for auto liability.
Covers certain situations when you’re not under dispatch (definitions vary). Common for owner-ops leased on.
Covers damage to a trailer you don’t own while it’s in your care under a written interchange agreement.
Most expensive mistake: thinking “I have a COI” means “I’m covered.” Your policy wording + endorsements decide outcomes, not the certificate.
FMCSA minimums + filings (the stuff that keeps authority active)
FMCSA minimum liability depends on what you haul. Your insurer (not you) files the proof (BMC-91 / 91X). Treat “minimums” as a legal floor — shippers and brokers may require higher.
Three things to verify
- Named insured matches your authority exactly (spelling, LLC/Inc, address).
- BMC-91 / 91X filing is posted for your USDOT/MC (insurer files it).
- No lapse window: cancellations and replacements can create “dead time” if handled late.
Dispatch reality: if your filings don’t show active, you’re not “up” — even if you paid the premium.
COI vs policy (quick truth)
A COI is a summary. It does not grant coverage by itself. When something goes wrong, the adjuster reads the policy + endorsements + exclusions.
Keep: COI, dec pages, endorsement index, and filings proof together in one binder.
If you need a carrier-ready compliance binder, start with DOT Audit Guide.
New authority: bind → file → activate (avoid the common delays)
Buying a policy is not the same as activating authority. Authority becomes usable when the correct filings hit FMCSA and match your registration.
Radius, commodities, drivers, garaging, equipment value. Wrong inputs = later pain.
Get binder + dec pages + COI. Verify insured name matches FMCSA application.
Insurer files BMC-91/91X (or surety). You can’t do it yourself as the carrier.
FMCSA describes dismissal timing if financial responsibility isn’t on file after publication.
Confirm authority + filings show active, then issue COIs to customers as needed.
Biggest delay: name/address mismatch (state formation docs vs FMCSA application vs insurance docs). Make it identical everywhere.
MCS-90 explained (what it is / what it’s not)
MCS-90 is a federally required endorsement attached to certain motor carrier public liability policies. It sits inside the “financial responsibility” system with FMCSA filings.
What it is
- Federal endorsement tied to minimum financial responsibility for public liability.
- Part of the filing ecosystem (policy + endorsements + insurer filing must align).
- Operational takeaway: keep your documents consistent; treat endorsements as critical.
Think: “paperwork that keeps authority compliant,” not “a magic shield.”
What it’s not
It’s not a substitute for safe operations, and it doesn’t replace proper limits, endorsements, or claim response. Insurance is priced on risk — your safety system (hiring, training, maintenance) is what changes the trend.
If you’re serious about lowering premiums, start with repeat violations + preventable incidents.
If you’re building a compliance binder: store MCS-90 and filing proof with your policy packet — not “somewhere in email.”
Premium drivers (what underwriters actually price)
Underwriters price two things: frequency (how often claims happen) and severity (how bad the big one could be). These are the levers you can actually pull.
If your CSA/BASICs are rising, expect insurance pressure. Insurers watch stability, not excuses. See: CSA Scores Explained.
Claims survival pack (first 2 hours / first 24 hours)
Claims don’t just cost money — they cost future insurability. The best carriers treat incidents like evidence and close the loop fast.
Safety first. Call authorities when needed. Follow company and legal requirements.
Photos/video, location/time, witness info, unit IDs, road/traffic controls, damage angles.
Dispatch + safety + insurer claim line. Start a single incident log (time-stamped).
ELD export, telematics/dash cam, maintenance history, DVIR, trip docs.
Next steps, repair logistics, drug/alcohol policy determination (if applicable), and corrective action notes.
First 24 hours (protect the file)
- Confirm claim number, adjuster contact, and next requested documents.
- Create an incident packet (photos, statements, docs, ELD export, maintenance records).
- Write a clean timeline while memory is fresh — facts only, no speculation.
- Implement corrective action if needed (coaching, maintenance changes, route policy).
The carriers that win claims have cleaner files — not louder opinions.
Dispatch/safety note
Every claim should generate a “one-page lesson learned” that becomes part of onboarding and weekly safety meetings. That’s how you reduce repeats (and that’s what underwriters want to hear).
Want a process template? Use DOT Audit Guide as the backbone.
Paperwork examples (COI, dec page, loss runs, incident packet)
These examples show what “clean insurance documentation” looks like. Replace with your real info — same structure.
Store COIs by customer + date. Keep the policy packet in the binder.
This sheet helps dispatch/onboarding answer COI questions fast.
Loss runs + corrective action notes can improve renewal outcomes.
This packet protects the future premium — not just today’s claim.
If your paperwork is messy, you’ll feel it at renewal. Fix the binder now, not after the next claim.
Renewal playbook (90 / 60 / 30)
Renewals are where carriers either level up or get trapped. Show the market that your risk is controlled and improving.
Loss runs, safety summary, driver roster, unit list, lane/radius reality, and changes since last term.
Get multiple quotes with consistent inputs. Negotiate deductibles/limits based on survivability.
Confirm insured name, filings, endorsements, and COI wording before the effective date.
Fix claim causes, document coaching, tighten hiring, and keep maintenance + HOS review consistent.
If your renewal keeps jumping, treat it like a KPI problem: reduce repeat incidents and show proof of control.
FAQ
Is $750,000 “enough” for trucking liability?
Do I legally need cargo insurance?
What actually “activates” authority?
What’s the fastest way to reduce premiums?
Why do brokers ask for extra wording on COIs?
Quick next steps
If you’re starting or cleaning up insurance this week, do these in order.
- 1) Confirm your named insured matches FMCSA and state docs exactly.
- 2) Verify your insurer’s filings show active (don’t rely on “we submitted it”).
- 3) Build your insurance binder: COI, dec pages, endorsements index, filings proof.
- 4) Print a claims packet and keep it in every truck.
- 5) Start a weekly “risk close”: claims near-misses, maintenance defects, driver coaching notes.
Educational content only (not legal/financial advice).
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Related: DOT Audit Guide • CSA Scores • Clearinghouse • Owner-Op vs Company