Concrete Contractor Builders Risk Insurance Cost
How much does Builders Risk cost for Concrete Contractors? Premium ranges, the underwriting variables that move them, and how to land in the lower half of the range with carriers that actively want to write the specialty trade segment.
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Most Concrete Contractors pay between $1,380 and $9,120 per year for Builders Risk, with the median concrete contractor paying roughly $3,420/year ($285/month). Premium is rated per $100 of project value; the spread reflects payroll/revenue size, three-year claims history, operational profile, and state. Clean operations consistently land in the lower half of that range.
What kinds of claims do Concrete Contractors actually file on Builders Risk?
Carriers do not price Builders Risk for Concrete Contractors in the abstract — they price it against the loss patterns the specialty trade segment has produced over the last decade. The scenario set that drives most of the premium load includes the frequency-driven losses typical of this segment: claims that combine moderate-to-high frequency with severity tails that surprise less-experienced markets.
A single severe loss inside the prior three-year window typically lifts renewal premium 25-50% for the following cycle. Two or more inside the same window push the account toward surplus lines, where pricing is typically 1.5-3x standard market levels.
Low-end vs high-end profile: what does each look like?
The $1,380–$9,120/year spread on Builders Risk for Concrete Contractors is not arbitrary. The low-end profile is structurally different from the high-end:
Low end — typically a concrete contractor with stable ownership, clean 3-year claims, fewer than 5 employees, conservative territory, and documentation that anticipates underwriter questions. Standard-market pricing.
High end — material claim history, larger operation, broader scope, or unusual exposures that push the carrier to either debit-price or move the account to surplus. Premium load of 1.5-3x the low-end norm is common.
Which class codes drive Builders Risk pricing for Concrete Contractors?
The first thing an underwriter does on a Concrete Contractors Builders Risk submission is assign a ISO class. That single decision sets the base rate per $100 of project value and determines which carriers can quote. The wrong class is the most common cause of overpayment on Builders Risk accounts.
If you have moved between insurers, request the class code on each prior binder and compare. Inconsistencies between carriers often point to a mis-classification you can correct at next renewal.
Trading deductible for premium on Builders Risk
Deductible elections move Builders Risk premium predictably for Concrete Contractors. The standard tradeoff: each step up in deductible removes a layer of small-claim handling cost from the carrier, who returns roughly 6-12% of that savings to you as premium credit.
For most Concrete Contractors, moving from a $1,000 to a $5,000 deductible saves 8-15% on premium. Moving to $10,000+ can save 20-25%, but requires demonstrated financial reserves the carrier can verify at binding.
How does Concrete Contractors Builders Risk cost compare to general construction?
The Builders Risk rate gap between Concrete Contractors and general construction reflects different loss patterns in each class. Concrete Contractors produce a frequency-driven loss shape, which carriers price one way; general construction produce a different shape and a different price.
For Concrete Contractors specifically, the unique drivers of the loss shape produce a per-unit rate that may run higher or lower than general construction depending on the carrier and the year. Over a five-year cycle, the rate differential moves but the directional ranking tends to hold.
State-by-state factors that change Concrete Contractors Builders Risk pricing
Where a concrete contractor operates affects Builders Risk pricing as much as how the concrete contractor operates. State-level factors include: rate filings approved or pending, judicial environment, NCCI vs independent rating bureau treatment, and state-specific endorsements required (or excluded) by law.
Coverage Axis sees the same specialty trade risk priced 25-45% apart between the cheapest and most expensive feasible states. The state your business is domiciled in vs the states you operate in both affect the rating math.
Hard market or soft market? Concrete Contractors Builders Risk pricing context
The 2026 commercial insurance market for Concrete Contractors Builders Risk sits at the tail end of a multi-year hardening cycle. After several years of 8-15% annual rate increases, the specialty trade segment is showing signs of stabilization — but rates have not unwound the prior hardening, so Concrete Contractors are paying meaningfully more than they were five years ago.
Practical implication: 2026 renewals are likely to come in flat to +6% on clean accounts, with the larger increases reserved for accounts with claim history. Shopping the market is more productive in a stabilizing cycle than it was during peak hardening.
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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.
COMMON QUESTIONS
Frequently Asked Questions
Most Concrete Contractors pay $1,380-$9,120/year for Builders Risk, with the median around $3,420. The spread reflects crew size, claim history, and the residential-vs-commercial revenue mix.
Yes. A single paid claim in the prior 3 years typically lifts renewal premium 25-50%. Two or more paid claims often push the account to surplus markets at 1.5-3x baseline.
Complete submissions for standard Concrete Contractors risks turn around in 24-48 hours. Specialty placements (prior claims, multi-state, unusual scope) take 3-5 business days.
$1M/$2M is the entry tier and contract minimum for most projects. $2M/$4M is common for commercial work. Umbrella above primary is the standard structure for accounts needing higher effective limits.
Test the market every 2-3 years, especially before a renewal that follows a claim or after a significant operational change. Annual shopping can erode loyalty credits.
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