Trucking Company Commercial Crime Insurance Cost
How much does Commercial Crime cost for Trucking Companies? 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 motor carrier segment.
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Most Trucking Companies pay between <strong>$480 and $2,640 per year</strong> for Commercial Crime, with the median trucking company paying roughly <strong>$1,140/year ($95/month)</strong>. Premium is rated per $1,000 of employee dishonesty limit; 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.
How is Commercial Crime priced for Trucking Companies?
The rating engine for Commercial Crime works per $1,000 of employee dishonesty limit, with ISO setting the framework most insurers begin with. Inside a motor carrier class, base rates can vary 15-30% between carriers writing the same risk, which is why placement strategy matters.
On top of base rates, underwriters apply experience modifiers (3-year loss history), schedule rating credits/debits, and any state-mandated adjustments. The result is your final premium — and the gap between the cheapest and most expensive carrier on the same risk is often material.
The factors that increase Trucking Companies Commercial Crime cost
The variables that drive Commercial Crime pricing for Trucking Companies fall into a predictable hierarchy. Top five:
- Power-unit count and radius of operation
- Driver experience and CDL MVR records
- Commodity hauled (general freight vs hazmat vs auto)
- Three-year auto loss ratio
- DOT inspection / out-of-service rate
Underwriters review these in roughly that order. The first factor on the list usually determines whether a risk is in the standard market or pushed to surplus lines, where rates run 1.5-3x higher.
Inside the Trucking Companies Commercial Crime premium spread
Two Trucking Companies can both be quoted on Commercial Crime and end up at opposite ends of the $480–$2,640/year range. The shape of each profile:
Low-end profile (~$480/year): owner-operator or small crew, no claims in three years, clean operational documentation, single-state operation, conservative scope. Eligible for standard-market preferred tiers and bundled placements.
High-end profile (~$2,640/year): larger crew or fleet, one or more paid claims in three years, broader operating territory, more aggressive scope mix. May still be in standard market but with debit pricing, or pushed to surplus depending on the carrier appetite.
How do deductibles change Commercial Crime cost for Trucking Companies?
Deductible trade-offs on Commercial Crime for Trucking Companies are linear inside the standard market and accelerate at higher retentions. The realistic credit schedule looks like:
- $1K → $2.5K: 5-8% credit
- $2.5K → $5K: 8-12% additional
- $5K → $10K: 10-15% additional, but only with reserve documentation
Going beyond $10K usually requires moving to a large-deductible or self-insured retention (SIR) structure that not every carrier offers for this segment.
Sizing the Commercial Crime limit for Trucking Companies
Trucking Companies typically buy Commercial Crime limits at one of three tiers: $1M/$2M (entry, contract minimum), $2M/$4M (mid-market, common requirement for commercial projects), or $1M/$2M primary with $5M+ umbrella (mature operations with large contracts).
The third structure is usually the cheapest path to high effective limits. The umbrella picks up where the primary ends, and pricing per $1M of umbrella is roughly 40-60% of pricing per $1M of additional primary limit.
How Trucking Companies Commercial Crime premium evolves at renewal
Commercial Crime renewal pricing for Trucking Companies typically moves 0-10% on a clean year, 10-25% on a year with one moderate claim, and 25-60%+ on a year with severe or multiple claims. Inflation in the motor carrier segment also lifts rates 4-8% per year independent of any individual account's loss experience.
The largest single jump at renewal usually comes from a paid claim hitting the experience modifier window. Claims roll out of that window after three years, so the worst year of pricing is usually the renewal immediately following a claim — pricing improves in subsequent years if no new claims occur.
How does Trucking Companies Commercial Crime cost compare to specialty hauling?
The Commercial Crime rate gap between Trucking Companies and specialty hauling reflects different loss patterns in each class. Trucking Companies produce a fleet-auto-driven loss shape, which carriers price one way; specialty hauling produce a different shape and a different price.
For Trucking Companies specifically, the unique drivers of the loss shape produce a per-unit rate that may run higher or lower than specialty hauling depending on the carrier and the year. Over a five-year cycle, the rate differential moves but the directional ranking tends to hold.
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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
Trucking Companies Commercial Crime pricing reflects the fleet-auto-driven loss shape of motor-carrier exposures. Commercial auto alone is the largest premium line, and carriers price the severity tails of catastrophic auto losses heavily.
Often. Carriers offering telematics-based programs can credit 5-15% for documented safe-driving behavior. ELD data is increasingly required regardless.
ACORD 125, commercial auto ACORDs, three years of loss runs, MCS-90 endorsement on hazmat operations, power-unit and trailer schedules, full driver list with MVRs, and a commodity-hauled narrative.
Significantly. General freight rates run at base; hazmat, auto-hauling, and refrigerated typically rate 30-100% higher depending on the commodity and the carrier.
Auto liability minimums vary by commodity (federal minimums apply for hazmat). Most Trucking Companies carry $1M auto with umbrella stacked to reach $5M-$10M effective limits required by shippers.
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