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Cleaning Company Commercial Auto: Pricing Methodology

Exactly how Commercial Auto is calculated for Cleaning Companies — the rating basis, class codes, audit mechanics, experience modifiers, schedule rating, and the renewal-cycle math that determines what you actually pay.

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per vehicle

Rating Basis (ISO)

3yr

Experience Mod Window

±15-25%

Typical Schedule Rating Range

15-30%

Spread Between Carriers Same Risk

QUICK ANSWER

Commercial Auto premium for Cleaning Companies is calculated <strong>per vehicle</strong>, using ISO loss costs as the framework. Carriers apply their own loss-cost multiplier, your experience modifier (3-year loss history), and schedule rating (underwriter judgment) to produce the final premium. The audit at policy expiration trues up estimated vs actual exposure.

How is Commercial Auto premium calculated for Cleaning Companies?

Cleaning Companies pay Commercial Auto priced per vehicle. The rate per unit is the multiplicand; your declared exposure is the multiplier. The product is your base premium before experience-modifier and schedule-rating adjustments.

Understanding the unit lets you ask the right questions at renewal: which exposure changed, what rate is being applied, and where the schedule credits or debits landed. Without that view, the renewal number arrives unexplained.

The audit basis on Cleaning Companies Commercial Auto

Commercial Auto policies on Cleaning Companies are typically audited at expiration. The auditor reviews actual exposure data for the policy period — payroll, revenue, vehicles, locations — and trues up the premium against what was estimated at binding.

If actual exposure exceeds estimated, you owe additional premium ("audit premium"). If actual exposure was lower, the carrier refunds the difference ("return premium"). Audit results that significantly diverge from the original estimate often trigger underwriting questions at the next renewal.

How does schedule rating affect Cleaning Companies Commercial Auto?

Filed schedule-rating plans give underwriters discretion to apply credits or debits to Cleaning Companies Commercial Auto based on operational qualities. The underwriter documents the rationale; the credit or debit applies through the policy term.

Schedule credits add up to real money. A 10% schedule credit on a $15,000 premium is $1,500/year — and that credit usually carries forward at renewal as long as the operational factors that justified it remain.

How three years of claims affect Cleaning Companies Commercial Auto pricing

Cleaning Companies experience modifiers reflect actual loss performance against expected. The actual is your paid losses (excluding incurred-but-not-paid reserves on open claims); the expected is the class's average loss-cost benchmark.

Improving the mod is a long game. A single clean year reduces the most recent (heaviest-weighted) year's impact. Three consecutive clean years can move a debit mod into credit territory. The patience pays — mod credits compound across multiple policy lines.

The renewal-time math for Cleaning Companies Commercial Auto

At renewal, the Cleaning Companies Commercial Auto premium recalculates with updated inputs: the new base rate (from any approved rate filings), updated exposure (declared or audited), refreshed experience modifier, and any schedule-rating adjustments the underwriter applies.

The combined effect determines the renewal premium. A flat renewal year on a clean account might be ±3-5%. Years with claims or significant exposure changes can move premium ±20-40% or more.

Why two carriers price the same Cleaning Companies risk differently on Commercial Auto

Cleaning Companies accounts placed in the standard market typically see 3-6 competing quotes, each with its own rating math. The spread between cheapest and most expensive is rarely an error; it reflects each carrier's view of the segment's loss potential and its competitive strategy.

Within a single year, carrier appetite shifts. A carrier that was hungry for Cleaning Companies in January may pull back by July if its loss experience deteriorates. This is why the same submission can produce different competitive landscapes depending on timing.

Where Cleaning Companies accounts most often get over-rated on Commercial Auto

Three methodology errors account for most Cleaning Companies Commercial Auto overpayments: mis-classification (a class assignment that doesn't match the predominant operation), over-stated exposure (more revenue/payroll declared than reality), and unclaimed credits (schedule rating left on the table).

The fix is process, not policy. Pre-renewal audits catch these errors before they get baked into another year of pricing.

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Chris DeCarolis, Senior Commercial Insurance Advisor at Coverage Axis

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Chris DeCarolis

Senior Commercial Insurance Advisor

Chris DeCarolis is a Senior Commercial Insurance Advisor at Coverage Axis. His experience in commercial risk placement started in 2007. He has helped contractors, trades, and specialty businesses build coverage programs that fit their operations — specializing in general liability, workers comp, commercial auto, and umbrella programs for high-risk industries. Chris holds a Florida 220 General Lines license (G038859) and is a graduate of Brown University.

FL 220 License (G038859) 18+ Years Experience Brown University

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