Electrical Contractors Insurance

Coverage recommendations, carrier options, and cost estimates for insuring electrical contractors businesses. Built for independent agents quoting this class.

NAICS: 238210·Also known as: electrician, electrical company, electrical contractor

Recommended Coverages

GL

essential

Third-party bodily injury, property damage, personal and advertising injury arising from business operations. For Electrical Contractors businesses, key exposures include high property damage potential. Common claims include property damage from wiring error.

Typical Limits

$1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate

Premium Range

$400 - $3,000/year for small businesses; $3,000 - $15,000+ for contractors and higher-risk classes

Workers Comp

essential

Medical expenses, lost wages, rehabilitation costs, and death benefits for employees injured on the job. Common claims include worker electrocution.

Typical Limits

Statutory limits per state law; Employers Liability typically $500K/$500K/$500K

Premium Range

Based on payroll × class code rate × experience mod. Ranges from $0.50 to $30+ per $100 of payroll depending on classification

Commercial Auto

recommended

Liability, physical damage, medical payments, and uninsured motorist coverage for vehicles used in business operations.

Typical Limits

$1M combined single limit is standard; $500K minimum for most commercial operations

Premium Range

$1,200 - $5,000/year per vehicle for light commercial; $5,000 - $15,000+ per vehicle for heavy trucks

Inland Marine

recommended

Property in transit, property at temporary locations, mobile equipment, tools, and specialized movable property not adequately covered by standard commercial property policies. For Electrical Contractors businesses, key exposures include fire risk from faulty wiring. Common claims include fire caused by electrical work.

Typical Limits

Based on scheduled equipment/property values. Ranges from $25K for small tool floaters to $1M+ for heavy equipment

Premium Range

$300 - $1,500/year for tool floaters; $1,500 - $10,000+ for heavy equipment schedules

Umbrella

situational

Additional liability limits above underlying GL, auto, and employers liability policies. For Electrical Contractors businesses, key exposures include code compliance liability. Agent note: Umbrella limits of $2M+ are common requirements for commercial project bids

Typical Limits

$1M - $10M increments above underlying policies

Premium Range

$500 - $2,000/year for $1M umbrella on small business; $1,500 - $8,000+ for contractors and higher-risk classes

Risk Profile

Physical Risk

high

Liability Risk

high

Professional Risk

low

Property Risk

high

Top Risks

  • Fire risk from faulty wiring
  • Electrocution hazard
  • Completed operations exposure
  • Code compliance liability
  • High property damage potential

Carriers That Write Electrical Contractors

One of the largest small commercial writers in the U.S. with broad class appetite. Competitive BOP pricing and a streamlined agent portal with fast online quoting.

GLWCUmbrella

Broad appetite across most commercial classes with competitive package pricing. Strong multi-line capabilities — agents can bundle GL, property, auto, and umbrella under one carrier.

GLWCCommercial AutoUmbrella

Known for competitive commercial auto rates and fast online quoting. Strong appetite for businesses with vehicle fleets and a growing BOP book.

GLCommercial AutoWC

Berkshire Hathaway-backed (AM Best A++) with competitive pricing for standard small business classes. Fully online quoting and binding process.

GLWCCommercial AutoUmbrella

Cost Estimate

$5,000 - $25,000+ for businesses with $500K - $5M revenue

Key Pricing Factors

  • Annual revenue ($500K - $5M is typical for this class)
  • Employee count (5-30 is typical)
  • Payroll
  • Residential vs commercial ratio
  • New construction vs retrofit
  • License status

See the Per-Coverage Cost Breakdown

For median GL, BOP, WC, and auto premiums sourced from Insureon, plus a worked quote example and the underwriting questions to expect, see our electrical contractors insurance cost page.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much does Electrical Contractors insurance cost?
Insurance costs for Electrical Contractors businesses vary based on revenue ($500K - $5M), employee count (5-30), location, claims history, and coverage types needed. Key coverages include GL, Workers Comp, Commercial Auto. Get quotes from multiple carriers to find competitive pricing — premiums can vary 20-40% between carriers for the same account.
What insurance does an Electrical Contractors business need?
Most Electrical Contractors businesses need GL, Workers Comp, Commercial Auto at minimum. Fire is the top completed operations risk — carriers scrutinize loss history carefully The right coverage package depends on your revenue, employee count, and specific risk exposures.
What are the biggest insurance risks for Electrical Contractors businesses?
The primary risks for Electrical Contractors businesses include: Fire risk from faulty wiring; Electrocution hazard; Completed operations exposure; Code compliance liability. Common claims include Fire caused by electrical work, Worker electrocution, Property damage from wiring error. Understanding these risks helps agents recommend appropriate coverage limits and endorsements.
What do carriers look at when underwriting Electrical Contractors businesses?
Key underwriting factors for Electrical Contractors include: Annual revenue, Payroll, Residential vs commercial ratio, New construction vs retrofit, License status, Experience modification rate. Carriers use these factors to determine pricing and eligibility. Businesses with clean loss history and strong risk management practices typically qualify for better rates.
What should agents know when quoting Electrical Contractors insurance?
Fire is the top completed operations risk — carriers scrutinize loss history carefully. Residential electricians face different risk profile than commercial/industrial. Umbrella limits of $2M+ are common requirements for commercial project bids. Using a comparative rater to quote multiple carriers simultaneously helps agents find the best combination of coverage and pricing for each Electrical Contractors account.

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