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Trucking Company Inland Marine Insurance Cost

How much does Inland Marine 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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$180-$2,160

Typical Annual Inland Marine Premium (Trucking Companies, Insureon-cited)

$55/mo

Median trucking company Monthly Premium

15-30%

Pricing Spread Same Risk Across Carriers

24hr

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QUICK ANSWER

Most Trucking Companies pay between <strong>$180 and $2,160 per year</strong> for Inland Marine, with the median trucking company paying roughly <strong>$660/year ($55/month)</strong>. Premium is rated per $100 of equipment 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 does trucking company typically pay for Inland Marine?

For a typical trucking company, expect to pay roughly $55/month ($660/year) for Inland Marine. The realistic spread runs $180–$2,160/year end to end.

That spread is not noise — it tracks specific underwriting variables. Within the motor carrier segment, pricing is fleet-auto-driven, so two businesses with similar revenue can land hundreds of dollars apart per month depending on claims history, payroll, and operational profile.

The factors that increase Trucking Companies Inland Marine cost

The variables that drive Inland Marine 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.

What kinds of claims do Trucking Companies actually file on Inland Marine?

Carriers do not price Inland Marine for Trucking Companies in the abstract — they price it against the loss patterns the motor carrier segment has produced over the last decade. The scenario set that drives most of the premium load includes the fleet-auto-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.

AAIS / ISO class codes that govern Trucking Companies Inland Marine rating

Underwriters assign Trucking Companies a AAIS / ISO classification before any premium calculation. The assigned class determines the base loss cost per $100 of equipment value and constrains which carriers will quote at all.

If the class code is wrong, every downstream number is wrong. Two operations can be similar in practice but rated under different classes — and the class difference alone can swing premium 15-30%. Always verify the code on the binder.

Deductible math: should Trucking Companies raise their Inland Marine deductible?

Raising deductible is the most direct way for Trucking Companies to reduce Inland Marine premium without changing operations. The tradeoff: you self-insure the first dollars of every claim in exchange for a smaller annual premium.

Whether the math works depends on claim frequency. For motor carrier risks, expected claim count is the variable to model. If your three-year history shows zero claims, raising deductible is almost always net-positive economically. If you have one or more claims, the breakeven moves and a tax-advised modeling exercise is worth doing.

The Inland Marine submission package for Trucking Companies

To quote Inland Marine accurately on Trucking Companies, carriers typically require: ACORD 125 (commercial general application), ACORD 126 (general liability supplemental) where applicable, three years of loss runs, payroll details, revenue split by operation type, and a brief operations narrative.

Submissions that arrive complete are quoted in 1-3 business days. Submissions missing loss runs or payroll detail typically cycle for 5-10 days while the underwriter chases the missing information — and during that delay, the account often gets deprioritized vs cleaner submissions in the underwriter's queue.

How does Trucking Companies Inland Marine cost compare to specialty hauling?

The Inland Marine 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 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.

FL 220 License (G038859) 18+ Years Experience Brown University

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