Restaurants 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 restaurants within 24 hours with all required endorsements.
Get Your COI →What are COI essentials for Restaurants?
A certificate of insurance for restaurants 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 restaurants classified under ISO GL class code 16900 (Restaurants) (GL) and NCCI 9082 (Restaurant NOC) and 9083 (Restaurant — fast food) (WC), your COI must accurately reflect these classifications and corresponding limits. (Source: ACORD, NCCI, ISO)
What must your Restaurants 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 9082 (Restaurant NOC) and 9083 (Restaurant — fast food) 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 Restaurants?
- 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
Restaurants by the Numbers
Restaurant workers experience a nonfatal injury rate of 3.6 per 100 FTE, with burns, cuts, and slips as the primary mechanisms. The industry employs 12.5 million workers (Source: BLS SOII, National Restaurant Association)
Burns from cooking equipment and hot oil, knife lacerations, slip-and-fall on greasy kitchen floors, and repetitive motion injuries from food preparation. Average claim severity: Average restaurant WC lost-time claim: $14,800; average customer slip-and-fall GL claim: $42,000. Carriers use this data to set base rates for restaurants — businesses with documented safety programs and clean claims histories access rates 15–30% below the standard.
Classification detail: Workers compensation under NCCI 9082 (Restaurant NOC) and 9083 (Restaurant — fast food) at base rates of $3.60–$8.20 per $100 of payroll. General liability under ISO GL class code 16900 (Restaurants). (Source: NCCI, ISO)
What regulatory standards apply to Restaurants?
Key regulatory framework: OSHA 29 CFR 1910.303 (electrical safety for kitchen equipment), FDA Food Code (adopted by state health departments), state health department inspection requirements, and state ABC (Alcoholic Beverage Control) liquor service laws
Insurance compliance and regulatory compliance are linked for restaurants. 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 Restaurants Insurance Resources
- Restaurants Coverage Overview
- Restaurants Premium Guide
- Restaurants Coverage Requirements
- Restaurants Carrier Rankings
- Learn About Workers Compensation for Restaurants
- Umbrella / Excess Liability for Restaurants Coverage
- Warehouse Legal Liability for Restaurants Insurance
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Coverage Axis issues restaurants certificates within 24–48 hours with ongoing management that keeps every COI current. Verified, compliant, and tracked across all holders. Stop losing contracts over COI issues.
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What's on Your Certificate
Event Liability for Hosted Functions
Hotels and venues hosting events must provide COIs to event organizers showing adequate liability limits for the expected attendance. Your certificate must confirm coverage for the specific event dates and location, and many event contracts require the organizer to be named as additional insured for the duration of the event.
Product Liability for Food Service
Food service businesses must demonstrate product liability coverage on their COI for claims arising from foodborne illness, allergic reactions, and contamination. Catering companies and food truck operators face particular scrutiny because they serve food at third-party venues where the venue owner requires proof that food-related claims will be covered by the caterer's insurance.
Liquor Liability Coverage Evidence
Restaurants, bars, hotels, and event venues serving alcohol must show liquor liability coverage on their COI. Landlords, event organizers, and licensing boards require proof that liability arising from the sale or service of alcohol is specifically insured — standard GL typically excludes liquor liability for businesses in the business of selling alcohol.
Business Income / Extra Expense Proof
Landlords and lenders require proof of business income and extra expense coverage on retail and hospitality COIs. This coverage pays for lost income during restoration after a covered property loss — critical for restaurants and hotels where a single kitchen fire or water damage event can shut down operations for weeks or months.
Tenant Insurance Certificate for Lease Compliance
Retail tenants must provide COIs to landlords before lease execution and annually thereafter. Your certificate must show GL limits meeting the lease requirement (typically $1M/$2M), name the landlord and property manager as additional insured, and include waiver of subrogation on property coverage. Late certificate submission can trigger lease default notices.
WHO NEEDS YOUR COI
Common Certificate Holders
Liquor Licensing Authorities
State and local liquor boards require proof of liquor liability coverage as a condition of license issuance and renewal. Your COI must demonstrate coverage limits meeting the jurisdiction's statutory minimums, and lapsed coverage can result in immediate license suspension.
Franchise Systems and Brand Owners
Franchise agreements mandate specific insurance requirements that must appear on your COI. Franchise systems set minimum limits, approved carrier lists, and required endorsements. Non-compliance with franchise insurance requirements can trigger default provisions and jeopardize your franchise agreement.
Shopping Center Landlords
Mall and shopping center landlords require tenant COIs as a lease condition. Certificates must name the landlord, property manager, and often anchor tenants as additional insureds. Lease insurance requirements specify exact GL limits, property coverage proof, and often require liquor liability for restaurants and bars within the center.
Event Organizers and Catering Clients
Catering companies and mobile food vendors must provide COIs to event organizers, venue owners, and private clients. Event-specific certificates must show product liability for food service, liquor liability if applicable, and the event organizer named as additional insured for the specific event dates and location.
Hotel Chains and Brand Standards
Hotel management companies must provide COIs meeting brand owner insurance standards. Major hotel brands (Marriott, Hilton, IHG) specify exact coverage types, minimum limits, and approved carrier requirements in their franchise or management agreements. Brand standard compliance audits verify COI accuracy annually.
COVERAGE COSTS
What does each coverage cost for Restaurants?
Dollar ranges for every coverage type, with the underwriting drivers that move premium up or down.
WHY COVERAGE AXIS
Why Coverage Axis
Insurance Carriers
Access to a broad network of A-rated carriers competing for your business — your advisor handles the rest.
COI Turnaround
Certificates and additional insured endorsements delivered the same day you need them.
Years of Experience
Our advisors specialize in commercial insurance — we understand your industry inside and out.
Cost to You
Getting a quote is always free. No hidden fees, no obligation — just straightforward coverage advice.

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.
COMMON QUESTIONS
Frequently Asked Questions
A retail or hospitality COI summarizes your GL, property, product liability, liquor liability, and WC coverage for landlords, franchise systems, and licensing authorities.
Yes. Shopping center and commercial landlords require tenant COIs before lease execution and annually thereafter. Your certificate must show GL limits meeting lease requirements and name the landlord as additional insured.
Yes, if you sell or serve alcohol. Landlords and liquor licensing boards require proof of dedicated liquor liability coverage — standard GL typically excludes liquor liability for businesses in the business of selling alcohol.
Coverage Axis delivers retail and hospitality COIs within 24 hours, pre-formatted with liquor liability, product liability, and additional insured language for landlords and franchise systems. Rush certificates for lease closings available same-day.
Yes. Franchise agreements mandate specific insurance requirements that must appear on your COI. Non-compliance can trigger franchise default provisions and jeopardize your agreement.
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