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General Liability Insurance for Motor Carriers: Beyond the Truck and the Freight
General liability protects your trucking business from third-party injury and property claims that fall outside your auto policy. Here is what it covers and when you need it.
General liability insurance for motor carriers covers third-party bodily injury and property damage claims that are not related to the operation of your vehicles. While commercial auto and cargo policies cover truck-related incidents, general liability fills important gaps for the business itself.
What General Liability Covers for Truckers
- **Premises liability** — If a shipper, vendor, or visitor is injured at your office, terminal, or yard
- **Loading and unloading injuries** — Some policies extend to injuries that occur during loading and unloading operations not covered by auto policy
- **Product liability** — If your operation involves warehousing, handling, or distribution of products
- **Advertising injury** — Claims related to copyright infringement, defamation, or false advertising in your business marketing
- **Operations liability** — Third-party property damage caused by your business operations that are not tied to vehicle use
What It Does Not Cover
General liability does not replace commercial auto liability. If you have an accident on the road, that is a commercial auto claim, not a general liability claim. The two coverages are separate and complementary.
Who Needs General Liability in Trucking
- Carriers with terminals, yards, or warehouses
- Owner-operators who interact with shippers and receivers at their facilities
- Carriers who have employees or contractors working at non-vehicle locations
- Any trucking business that wants protection beyond the vehicle
Cost
General liability for small carriers and owner-operators is typically affordable — often $500 to $2,000 per year depending on revenue, number of employees, and type of operations. Many carriers purchase it as part of a business owners policy (BOP) that bundles multiple coverages.
FMCSA Requirements
FMCSA does not specifically require general liability. The mandate is for commercial auto liability (primary liability) and cargo coverage for certain operations. General liability is a business protection decision, not a regulatory one.
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