Hurricane and hail exposure
Gulf Coast work and Dallas-area hail exposure affect property/builder's risk markets more than GL, but severity of weather-related construction claims does flow into GL rates for exposed regions.
Texas contractor GL is among the most competitive in the country. Standard markets are deep, rates are reasonable, and the tort environment — while not benign — is less pro-plaintiff than coastal states. The biggest regional variance is hurricane/hail exposure on the Gulf Coast, which affects builder's risk and can flow indirectly into GL for hurricane-season work.
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Every state regulates commercial insurance differently. Here's what matters for general liability in Texas.
Gulf Coast work and Dallas-area hail exposure affect property/builder's risk markets more than GL, but severity of weather-related construction claims does flow into GL rates for exposed regions.
Texas doesn't have a state-level GC license (most other states do). Trade licenses exist for electrical, plumbing, HVAC, and a few others, but general contracting is regulated at the municipal level. Check local permit authorities for specific insurance requirements.
Texas contract law generally enforces waiver-of-subrogation and indemnification provisions aggressively. Read your commercial contracts carefully — 'anti-indemnity' statutes that exist in some states don't apply in TX the same way.
Rates vary meaningfully by state because class codes, litigation climate, medical costs, and regulatory requirements all differ. Here's the Texas picture.
A mid-size Texas GC with $2M revenue and clean history pays $2,500-$5,000 per year for $1M/$2M GL. Roofing runs 2-3x. Coastal counties (Harris, Galveston, Nueces) carry small wind/hurricane surcharges. Dallas and Austin price similar to most other major US metros.
Core coverage is the same nationwide. Texas-specific regulations layer on top of these baseline protections.
Medical costs and legal defense if someone who doesn't work for you is hurt on your job site — a client, a delivery driver, a passerby, another sub's crew.
If your work damages someone else's property — a cracked floor, a broken window, a burst pipe that floods a neighboring unit — GL pays the repair claim.
Claims that arise after the job is finished. A wall you framed collapses six months later; a floor you installed warps and causes damage. Completed-ops covers the liability.
Libel, slander, copyright infringement, or wrongful-advertising claims arising from how you market your business.
Even claims that are frivolous cost real money to defend. GL pays attorney fees, court costs, and expert witness fees — often in addition to the policy limit.
Small medical bills for on-site injuries — typically up to $5,000 per person — paid without a lawsuit, so small incidents don't spiral into claims.
| Factor | Impact | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| Trade / class code | Major | Roofing, demolition, and framing carry the highest GL rates. Low-hazard trades like painting and drywall are lower. This is the single biggest driver. |
| Annual revenue | Major | Most carriers rate on gross receipts. More revenue = more exposure = more premium. |
| Years in business | Moderate | Three or more years of clean experience unlocks standard-market rates. New ventures often start in E&S surplus-lines and graduate over time. |
| Claims history | Moderate | One closed-without-payment claim is usually fine. Multiple open claims or a large paid loss narrows the market. |
| Policy limits | Moderate | $1M/$2M is baseline. Higher limits add premium but are often required by commercial contracts. |
| Subcontractor usage | Moderate | How much work you sub out and whether those subs carry their own GL. Higher sub-costs on un-insured subs increases your exposure. |
| State | Minor | Litigation climate matters. New York and California are typically higher than Texas or Pennsylvania for the same class code. |
Texas-specific questions first, then the general general liability questions.
No state-level requirement for most contractors. Trade licenses (electrical, plumbing, HVAC) have their own GL requirements. Municipal permits and commercial contracts universally require GL regardless. $1M/$2M is the practical floor for commercial work.
GL isn't required by law in most states, but it is required by virtually every commercial contract, GC sub-contract, license bond, or project owner. In practice, if you want to work, you need it. Limits of $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate are the common baseline; large commercial jobs may demand $2M/$4M or higher.
Contractor GL typically costs $600–$3,000+ per year for a small-to-mid-size operation. Your trade class code is the single biggest driver — roofers and demolition contractors can pay 3–5x what a painter pays for the same limits. Revenue, claims history, and the state you work in also factor in. We shop 50+ carriers to find the right rate for your exact profile.
Workers' comp covers injuries to your own employees. General liability covers injuries and property damage to third parties — clients, passers-by, other subs, project owners. You typically need both, and they cover completely different claims.
No — GL is strictly for third-party claims. For theft or damage to your own tools, trailers, or equipment, you need inland marine / tools & equipment coverage. We place both lines together when it makes sense.
Yes — adding a general contractor, property owner, or lender as additional insured is standard on a commercial GL policy. Most contracts also require primary/non-contributory wording and sometimes a waiver of subrogation. Send us the contract's insurance schedule and we'll confirm exactly what needs to be endorsed.
Primary/non-contributory is contract language that requires your GL policy to respond first on a claim and not contribute alongside the additional insured's own coverage. Most commercial owners and GCs require it. It's a simple endorsement — we add it at no extra cost when a contract calls for it.
Once your policy is bound, we issue COIs in under sixty seconds. No three-day wait, no 'we'll get to it Monday.' GCs move fast, so we do too.
One or two closed-without-payment claims rarely disqualify you. Larger paid losses or open claims narrow the market but don't necessarily close it — carriers specializing in non-standard risks will still quote. Tell us your claim history up front and we'll tell you realistically where it lands.
Contractor GL is almost always written on an occurrence form — meaning a claim is covered if the incident happened while the policy was in force, even if the claim is filed years later. Claims-made forms are common in professional liability but rare for trade contractor GL.
Yes. If you hire subs, you should require proof of their own GL at the limit your contract with the project owner calls for. Without that, the sub's exposure falls on your policy. Most commercial GC contracts explicitly forbid using un-insured subs.
We place general liability for contractors across all 50 states. State-specific pages for the top markets.
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