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Warehouses 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 warehouses within 24 hours with all required endorsements.

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CG 20 37ISO Endorsement for Completed Operations AI
Class 8292NCCI WC Code for Warehouse Operations
4 CornersCoverage Determined by Policy Endorsement, Not COI Text
4.5Nonfatal Injury Rate per 100 Warehouse Workers (BLS)

Certificate of Insurance for Warehouses

A certificate of insurance for warehouses 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 warehouses classified under ISO GL class code 51200 (Warehousing and storage) (GL) and NCCI 8292 (Warehousing — storage) and 7360 (Warehousing — freight handling) (WC), your COI must accurately reflect these classifications and corresponding limits. (Source: ACORD, NCCI, ISO)


What must your Warehouses 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 8292 (Warehousing — storage) and 7360 (Warehousing — freight handling) 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 Warehouses?

  • 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

Why Carrier Selection Matters for Warehouses

The carrier you choose affects more than your premium. For warehouses, a specialist carrier writes broader coverage terms, handles claims faster with industry-specific expertise, and provides more stable renewal pricing than a generalist quoting your account as an accommodation.

Compare carriers on three dimensions: AM Best rating (financial ability to pay claims), NAIC complaint index (claims service quality vs industry median), and industry appetite (whether they actively write warehouses or just accept it occasionally). Coverage Axis evaluates all three for every carrier we recommend.


Warehouses by the Numbers

Warehouse workers experience a nonfatal injury rate of 5.5 per 100 FTE, with overexertion (26%), falls (21%), and contact with objects (19%) as the three leading injury mechanisms (Source: BLS SOII, 2022)

Forklift-pedestrian collisions (the most severe warehouse injury type), overexertion from manual pallet handling, struck-by from falling stored materials, and slip-and-fall on warehouse floors. Average claim severity: Average warehouse WC lost-time claim: $28,200 including forklift and material handling injuries. Carriers use this data to set base rates for warehouses — businesses with documented safety programs and clean claims histories access rates 15–30% below the standard.

Classification detail: Workers compensation under NCCI 8292 (Warehousing — storage) and 7360 (Warehousing — freight handling) at base rates of $4.40–$9.20 per $100 of payroll. General liability under ISO GL class code 51200 (Warehousing and storage). (Source: NCCI, ISO)


More Warehouses Insurance Resources


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CERTIFICATE DETAILS

What's on Your Certificate

Motor Truck Cargo Coverage

Shippers and freight brokers require proof of cargo insurance on your COI before releasing freight. Your certificate must show the cargo limit per occurrence, cargo types covered, and any exclusions. Reefer breakdown coverage, loading/unloading coverage, and debris removal are endorsements that sophisticated shippers look for on cargo certificates.

Hired and Non-Owned Auto Coverage

Trucking COIs must confirm coverage for hired vehicles (rented trucks) and non-owned vehicles (employee personal vehicles used for company business). Brokers and shippers verify this coverage because a leased or rented truck involved in an accident must have the same liability protection as your owned fleet.

MCS-90 Endorsement / BMC-91 Filing

Interstate motor carriers must show proof of FMCSA financial responsibility filings on their certificates. The MCS-90 endorsement or BMC-91 filing guarantees minimum liability coverage ($750,000 for general freight, $1M for oil, $5M for hazmat) as required by federal law. Shippers and brokers verify these filings electronically through SAFER before tendering freight.

Combined Single Limit Auto Liability

Trucking COIs show commercial auto liability as a Combined Single Limit (CSL) rather than split limits. The CSL combines bodily injury and property damage into one per-accident limit — typically $1M for standard freight operations. Hazmat haulers must carry $5M CSL as required by FMCSA regulations.

Trailer Interchange Coverage

When pulling trailers owned by shippers or other carriers, your COI must show trailer interchange coverage. This pays for physical damage to non-owned trailers in your possession. Without this endorsement, you are personally responsible for any damage to borrowed or interchanged trailers — a common and expensive gap in trucking insurance programs.

WHO NEEDS YOUR COI

Common Certificate Holders

Government Agencies (DOT/FMCSA)

The FMCSA requires proof of financial responsibility (BMC-91 or BMC-34) filed directly with the agency. This is not a standard COI but a regulatory filing that your insurance company must submit. Lapsed filings trigger automatic revocation of operating authority, making this the most critical "certificate" in trucking.

Leasing Companies and Trailer Owners

Equipment leasing companies and trailer pool operators require COIs showing physical damage coverage for leased or interchanged equipment. Your certificate must name the lessor as loss payee on equipment coverage and additional insured on your liability policies for losses arising from the operation of their equipment.

Shippers and Manufacturers

Companies shipping goods via your trucks require COIs showing commercial auto liability, cargo insurance, and your FMCSA authority status. Most shippers use automated certificate management systems that verify your coverage in real time and will not release loads until your COI is verified and current.

Warehouse and Distribution Centers

Warehouses and DCs require COIs before your trucks can enter their loading docks. Their requirements focus on commercial auto liability limits and cargo coverage to protect goods during the loading and unloading process. Dock damage history may trigger additional property damage coverage requirements.

Freight Brokers and 3PLs

Freight brokers are the most frequent COI requesters for trucking companies. Broker carrier packets require certificates showing auto liability, cargo, and GL coverage meeting their minimum thresholds — typically $1M auto, $100K cargo, and proof of active FMCSA operating authority.

COVERAGE COSTS

What does each coverage cost for Warehouses?

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 Liquor Liability 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 Warehouse Legal Liability Cost Cost Guide Workers Compensation Cost

WHY COVERAGE AXIS

Why Coverage Axis

50+

Insurance Carriers

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

24hr

COI Turnaround

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

15+

Years of Experience

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

$0

Cost to You

Getting a quote is always free. No hidden fees, no obligation — just straightforward coverage advice.

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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