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Concrete Contractor Commercial Crime: Pricing Methodology

Exactly how Commercial Crime is calculated for Concrete Contractors — 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 $1,000 of employee dishonesty limit

Rating Basis (ISO)

3yr

Experience Mod Window

±15-25%

Typical Schedule Rating Range

15-30%

Spread Between Carriers Same Risk

QUICK ANSWER

Commercial Crime premium for Concrete Contractors is calculated <strong>per $1,000 of employee dishonesty limit</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.

The unit of exposure behind Concrete Contractors Commercial Crime pricing

For Concrete Contractors, Commercial Crime premium is calculated per $1,000 of employee dishonesty limit. That is the unit of exposure carriers use to scale premium against the size of the operation. ISO maintains the rating framework most carriers start with, and each insurer layers on its own loss-cost multiplier.

Why the unit matters: a concrete contractor with twice the exposure unit will pay roughly twice the base premium, all else equal. If you understand the rating basis, you can predict how operational changes (revenue growth, headcount additions, fleet expansion) will move premium at renewal.

How are ISO class codes assigned to Concrete Contractors?

ISO classification is the first underwriting decision on a Concrete Contractors Commercial Crime submission. The class code drives the base rate and signals which carriers will compete for the account. Different carriers see different classes as in-appetite, so the class choice cascades into the entire placement.

If a concrete contractor has been with the same carrier for years, the class code on the binder may not have been reviewed during that time. Underwriting habits drift, and a class re-review at renewal often surfaces a cleaner classification that produces a meaningful rate credit.

What happens at policy audit for Concrete Contractors on Commercial Crime?

At policy expiration, the carrier audits the concrete contractor's actual exposure for the past year. The rating basis used at audit is the same one used at issuance — per $1,000 of employee dishonesty limit — applied to the documented actuals.

For Concrete Contractors, audit accuracy matters because errors compound. An over-estimate at binding overpays for a year; the audit returns it. An under-estimate underpays for a year; the audit owes it. Either way, the policy ends at the correct net cost; the question is just cash-flow timing.

The math behind a Concrete Contractors Commercial Crime policy

For a representative concrete contractor, the Commercial Crime premium math works roughly like this: (exposure per $1,000 of employee dishonesty limit) × (base rate per unit) × (experience modifier) × (schedule credit or debit) × (other adjustments) = premium.

If the rating exposure is 100 units, the base rate is $10/unit, the experience modifier is 0.95 (a 5% credit for clean claims), and the schedule rating applies a 3% credit, the base premium is $100 × $10 × 0.95 × 0.97 = $922. Multi-line discounts, payment-plan fees, and state taxes/surcharges produce the final billable amount.

The experience modifier on Concrete Contractors Commercial Crime

Experience modifiers on Concrete Contractors Commercial Crime are calculated from three years of paid losses, with the most recent year weighted heaviest. The calculation excludes the most recent policy year (still developing) and uses the prior three completed years.

Claims roll out of the mod window after three years. That is why pricing improves over time after a paid claim — the third anniversary of the claim is the point where it stops affecting the mod and pricing returns to baseline (absent new claims).

What changes at renewal for Concrete Contractors on Commercial Crime

The renewal-time recalc on Concrete Contractors Commercial Crime captures everything that has changed in the year between policies. New rate filings, your new exposure, your new loss experience, and any operational changes you disclosed all feed into the new premium.

If the renewal number surprises you, ask the broker for the line-by-line breakdown: base rate change, exposure change, experience-mod change, schedule-rating change. Each line is auditable. An unexplained renewal jump usually points to one of those factors moving meaningfully.

Hidden methodology errors on Concrete Contractors Commercial Crime

The most common reasons Concrete Contractors overpay on Commercial Crime are methodology errors, not bad rates. Top three by frequency: wrong class code (15-30% overpricing), wrong exposure declaration (auditable, but only at year-end), and missed schedule-rating credits the underwriter could have applied if asked.

None of these require operational changes to fix — just attention to the methodology paper trail. A 30-minute audit of the current binder against last year's typically surfaces at least one correctable error.

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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.

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