Insurance for California Commercial Trucking & Long-Haul Logistics
Trucking Insurance for California Operators.
Primary auto liability at federal minimums and above, cargo coverage, physical damage on trucks and trailers, MCS-90, workers' comp on a high-risk classification, and the carrier markets that actually want California trucking business. Built for owner-operators, small fleets, and growing logistics operations.
Why this matters
Why insurance matters for California trucking operations.
When a driver is in an at-fault accident, cargo is damaged in transit, or your truck is totaled, the right insurance covers the third-party claims, the freight value, and the equipment replacement — at trucking claim severities, one uninsured loss can end the business. Primary auto liability premium is significant, but consistently less than what a single catastrophic loss costs at California trucking exposure rates.
Standard commercial auto won't write trucking — the underwriting and pricing are different. Stacking primary auto liability (with FMCSA-compliant limits), cargo, physical damage, motor truck cargo (broker liability if applicable), MCS-90, and workers' comp coded for trucking is what makes the coverage actually match the operation. We work with the carriers who want California trucking and avoid the markets that don't.
- Primary auto liability ($750K–$1M+ FMCSA limits)
- Cargo coverage matched to actual freight value
- Physical damage on trucks and trailers
- MCS-90 endorsement for interstate operations
- Workers' comp on trucking class codes
Additional Industries We Serve
We're a California-employer-only broker. Browse the 25 industries we specialize in — if your operation doesn't fit yours exactly, call and we'll route you to the right coverage.
Show All 25 Industries
Additional Industries We Serve
We're a California-employer-only broker. Browse the 25 industries we specialize in — if your operation doesn't fit yours exactly, call and we'll route you to the right coverage.
Questions
Trucking Insurance FAQ
What are FMCSA minimum auto liability limits for trucking?
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration requires $750,000 in primary auto liability for most non-hazmat interstate trucking. $1M is required for trucks over 10,000 lbs hauling certain commodities. Hazmat hauling requires $5M+. California intrastate trucking typically follows similar minimums. We quote at the required minimum and explain when going higher makes sense.
Do I need cargo insurance if I'm leased to a carrier?
It depends on the lease agreement. Many carriers require you to carry cargo coverage even though they have their own. Some leases include cargo coverage in the deal. We review the lease language and structure your coverage to fit the actual relationship — sometimes you need full cargo, sometimes just contingent cargo, sometimes none.
Can you write owner-operators with just one truck?
Yes. We place insurance for solo owner-operators with one truck up through fleets with 50+ units. Premium varies dramatically by driver age, MVR, miles run, freight type, and operating radius. We shop multiple markets for owner-operators because pricing varies more than for established fleets.
Deep dive
California trucking insurance — what operators should understand.
What's the MCS-90 endorsement and when is it required?
MCS-90 is a federally-required endorsement on trucking auto liability that ensures the carrier will pay third-party claims even if the insured violated policy terms. Required for FMCSA-authorized interstate trucking. The carrier can recover from the insured after paying, but the third party gets paid. It's filing-only, not actual additional coverage — but without it, you can't operate interstate.
What's the difference between cargo insurance and motor truck cargo legal liability?
Cargo insurance is first-party — it pays for cargo damage regardless of fault, up to the policy limit. Motor truck cargo legal liability is third-party — it covers your legal liability to the cargo owner when you're at fault. Most trucking operations carry first-party cargo (the shipper expects it); brokers often carry MTC legal for the loads they arrange.
How do trucking workers' comp class codes work?
Trucking workers' comp uses several codes depending on operation: 7219 for trucking under 3 tons, 7229 for over 3 tons, 7230 for trucking with stop-and-go delivery operations, 7228 for trucking long-distance. Rates are high — trucking is one of the higher claim-frequency industries in workers' comp. Correct class coding matters enormously at audit.
What's a USDOT number and how does it affect insurance?
USDOT numbers identify FMCSA-registered carriers. Insurance carriers pull your USDOT number's safety scores, crash history, and inspection results during underwriting. A bad CSA score (Compliance, Safety, Accountability) can mean higher premiums or non-renewal. We help newer operations get coverage before their CSA scores develop and help established operations manage the carrier relationship through CSA changes.
Why does my MVR (driver record) matter so much?
Trucking auto liability is rated heavily on driver MVR — accidents, moving violations, hours-of-service violations, DOT inspection results. A single major violation (DUI, reckless, hit-and-run) typically triggers non-renewal. Multiple minor violations push premium up significantly. We help operations build hiring criteria that protect the rate, and we shop markets when an existing driver creates rating problems.
What's trailer interchange coverage?
When you pull a trailer that's not yours under a trailer interchange agreement, your auto liability won't cover damage to that trailer. Trailer interchange coverage fills the gap. Common in dedicated lane operations, drop-and-hook freight, and arrangements with brokers who supply trailers. Required by many trailer interchange agreements.
How does workers' comp work for owner-operators (the owner driving)?
Owner-operators can elect to be covered or excluded from their own workers' comp. Many fleets require owner-operators to carry occupational accident insurance instead (cheaper but provides less benefit). California specifically has restrictions on excluding owners — we structure this carefully because misstructured ownership can lead to uninsured injury claims.
What about CA-only intrastate trucking — do FMCSA rules apply?
FMCSA rules apply to interstate trucking. California intrastate trucking is regulated by CHP and CPUC with somewhat different requirements but generally similar minimum liability limits. We confirm whether you're interstate, intrastate, or both — and structure compliance for the right authority.
Also from EmployerSI
Need more than insurance?
We pair your coverage with the two other back-office systems most California employers need.
Back Office
Payroll & Bookkeeping
Payroll processing, bookkeeping, and the related compliance work — run by the same team that manages your insurance and HR, so your class codes, wage statements, and filings all line up.
Explore Payroll →HR Solutions
HR Compliance Support
California labor law guidance, PAGA prevention, handbook reviews, and AB-1825 harassment training. SHRM-certified advisors handle the day-to-day HR questions you shouldn't be answering from Google searches.
Explore HR Compliance →Next Best Step
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