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Industrial Rigging Contractors Certificate of Insurance

A certificate of insurance is your proof of coverage — the document that clients, contractors, and property owners require before you start work. We deliver COIs for industrial rigging contractors within 24 hours with all required endorsements.

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COI vs AICertificate Holder Status Does Not Confer Insured Coverage
Subpart CCOSHA Crane/Rigging Construction Standard
CG 20 10ISO Standard Endorsement for Ongoing Operations AI
NCCCORigger Level I/II Certification Standard

Certificate of Insurance for Industrial Rigging Contractors

A certificate of insurance for industrial rigging contractors is issued on the ACORD 25 form — the industry standard for verifying liability coverage. It proves your insurance is active, shows your policy limits, and identifies parties protected by your coverage.

For industrial rigging contractors classified under ISO GL class code 59994 (Rigging and machinery moving) (GL) and NCCI 5040 (Iron/steel erection — includes rigging) and 3724 (Machinery moving/rigging) (WC), your COI must accurately reflect these classifications and corresponding limits. (Source: ACORD, NCCI, ISO)


What must your Industrial Rigging Contractors COI include?

GL section: Policy on ISO CG 00 01 (Commercial General Liability — Occurrence Form) (occurrence form) with per-occurrence and aggregate limits. Additional insured endorsements CG 20 10 (Additional Insured — Owners, Lessees or Contractors — Scheduled), CG 20 37 (Additional Insured — Owners, Lessees or Contractors — Completed Operations), and CG 20 26 (Additional Insured — Designated Person or Organization) must be referenced by form number.

WC section: Statutory coverage in all operating states plus employers liability limits. Your NCCI 5040 (Iron/steel erection — includes rigging) and 3724 (Machinery moving/rigging) classification determines coverage scope.

Endorsements: Waiver of subrogation (CG 24 04 (Waiver of Transfer of Rights of Recovery Against Others to Us)), primary/noncontributory (CG 20 01 (Primary and Noncontributory — Other Insurance Condition)). Each must be actually attached to the underlying policy — not just listed on the certificate.

Critical: A COI does not create coverage — it reports what your policy includes. If an endorsement is listed on the COI but not attached to the policy, it will not respond to a claim.


Who Requires COIs from Industrial Rigging Contractors?

  • General contractors and project owners — specific limits, AI endorsements, primary/noncontributory
  • Landlords and property managers — lease compliance, premises liability naming
  • State licensing boards — proof of coverage for licensure or renewal
  • Lenders and financial institutions — loan and financing conditions
  • Direct clients — proof of coverage before service agreements

Industrial Rigging Contractors by the Numbers

Rigging and crane operations account for approximately 90 worker fatalities annually in the U.S. Struck-by from falling loads is the leading cause of death in rigging operations (Source: BLS CFOI, OSHA crane/rigging data)

Struck-by from dropped loads and rigging failures, crush injuries during heavy equipment positioning, falls from elevated work platforms during rigging operations, and musculoskeletal strain from manual handling of rigging hardware. Average claim severity: Average industrial rigging WC lost-time claim: $56,200 — reflecting catastrophic severity of rigging failures. Carriers use this data to set base rates for industrial rigging contractors — businesses with documented safety programs and clean claims histories access rates 15–30% below the standard.

Classification detail: Workers compensation under NCCI 5040 (Iron/steel erection — includes rigging) and 3724 (Machinery moving/rigging) at base rates of $10.40–$18.60 per $100 of payroll. General liability under ISO GL class code 59994 (Rigging and machinery moving). (Source: NCCI, ISO)


What regulatory standards apply to Industrial Rigging Contractors?

Key regulatory framework: OSHA 29 CFR 1926.1400-1441 (Cranes and Derricks in Construction), 1926.251 (Rigging Equipment), ASME B30 standards for below-the-hook lifting devices, and NCCCO crane operator certification requirements

Insurance compliance and regulatory compliance are linked for industrial rigging contractors. OSHA violations can trigger carrier audits, premium adjustments, and in severe cases, policy cancellation. Maintaining documented compliance is both a legal obligation and an insurance cost control strategy.


More Industrial Rigging Contractors Insurance Resources


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CERTIFICATE DETAILS

What's on Your Certificate

Umbrella / Excess Liability Proof

Industrial projects frequently require higher liability limits than a standard $1M/$2M GL policy provides. Your certificate must show umbrella or excess liability coverage that follows form over your primary GL, auto, and employers liability policies — typically $5M or $10M depending on facility requirements.

Pollution Liability Evidence

Industrial COIs must demonstrate pollution liability coverage — either through a standalone environmental policy or a pollution endorsement on your GL. Standard GL policies exclude pollution; industrial facility owners need proof that chemical spills, airborne releases, and contamination incidents during your work will be covered by your insurance program.

Completed Operations Coverage

Industrial projects require completed operations coverage that extends liability protection beyond project completion. Equipment installations, pipe fitting, and system commissioning can cause damage months after your crew leaves the site. Your certificate must confirm that products-completed operations coverage remains in force.

Workers Compensation Statutory Compliance

Industrial facility owners verify that your workers compensation coverage meets statutory requirements for every state where you operate. Your COI must show Part A (statutory benefits) and Part B (employers liability) limits, and multi-state operations must list all applicable states or show "all states" coverage.

Blanket Additional Insured Endorsement

Industrial facility owners require additional insured status on your GL policy. A blanket additional insured endorsement automatically extends this status to any party required by written contract — eliminating the need for individual endorsements for each facility and streamlining the certificate process for multi-site contractors.

WHO NEEDS YOUR COI

Common Certificate Holders

Plant and Facility Owners

Industrial plant owners require COIs before any contractor badge is issued. Their insurance requirements are typically outlined in Master Service Agreements that specify exact coverage types, minimum limits, and required endorsements — any deviation results in automatic rejection and work stoppage.

Equipment and Tool Rental Companies

Industrial equipment rental companies require COIs showing inland marine or equipment floater coverage for rented cranes, welding machines, compressors, and specialty tools. Rental agreements make you responsible for damage to equipment in your possession, and your certificate must prove this exposure is insured.

Turnaround and Shutdown Coordinators

Companies coordinating planned maintenance shutdowns require COIs from every craft contractor participating in the turnaround. Time-compressed turnaround schedules mean COI processing must happen weeks in advance — last-minute certificate deficiencies can disqualify your crew from the job.

Chemical and Refining Companies

Chemical plants and refineries impose the strictest COI requirements in the industrial sector. Certificates must demonstrate pollution liability, umbrella limits of $5M-$25M, and endorsements specific to chemical exposure, confined space operations, and hot work activities.

Environmental Regulators

EPA and state environmental agencies may require proof of environmental impairment liability before issuing permits for hazardous waste handling, asbestos abatement, or remediation work. Your COI must show pollution coverage specific to the regulated activity.

COVERAGE COSTS

What does each coverage cost for Industrial Rigging Contractors?

Dollar ranges for every coverage type, with the underwriting drivers that move premium up or down.

Cost Guide Builders Risk Cost Cost Guide Business Interruption Cost Cost Guide Business Owners Policy (BOP) Cost Cost Guide Commercial Auto Cost Cost Guide Commercial Crime Cost Cost Guide Commercial Property Cost Cost Guide Contractors Tools & Equipment Cost Cost Guide Cyber Liability Cost Cost Guide Directors & Officers (D&O) Cost Cost Guide Employment Practices Liability Cost Cost Guide Equipment Breakdown Cost Cost Guide Excess Workers Compensation Cost Cost Guide General Liability Cost Cost Guide Group Dental Cost Cost Guide Group Health Cost Cost Guide Hired & Non-Owned Auto Cost Cost Guide Inland Marine Cost Cost Guide Installation Floater Cost Cost Guide Pollution Liability Cost Cost Guide Product Liability Cost Cost Guide Professional Liability (E&O) Cost Cost Guide Umbrella / Excess Liability Cost Cost Guide Workers Compensation Cost

WHY COVERAGE AXIS

Why Coverage Axis

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Access to a broad network of A-rated carriers competing for your business — your advisor handles the rest.

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COI Turnaround

Certificates and additional insured endorsements delivered the same day you need them.

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Years of Experience

Our advisors specialize in commercial insurance — we understand your industry inside and out.

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Chris DeCarolis, Senior Commercial Insurance Advisor at Coverage Axis

YOUR ADVISOR

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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