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    Dealing with insurance claims in the final-mile delivery sector can be complex. For instance, if a driver is on a delivery, their personal auto policy usually won’t pay for an accident. Lawsuits are getting pricier, and insurers have tightened policy fine print. At the same time, customers are updating contracts to demand bigger insurance caps, so you’ll need more coverage to keep the work. Umbrella coverage is harder to place, and many operators now run hybrid fleets with employees and independent contractors (ICs).
It all adds up to costly surprises at claim time. Don’t treat insurance like a commodity purchase. Think of it as core operating infrastructure. If you spot any of the following red flags in your own business, it’s time to get these details right before an unexpected claim rocks the financial and reputational core of your business.
You probably carry a policy to protect your business when independent contractors get into a collision while working for you. There are two common versions:
Many insurers won’t allow an umbrella to attach over primaries that have defense-inside-limits, aggregates, or similar conditions. Others will attach only above a higher amount (for example, they won’t come in until you already have $2M underneath), forcing you to stack multiple policies to reach a customer’s requirement.
If you run a hybrid model of your fleet plus independent contractors under your authority, check your federal filing (the MC/authority paperwork proving you can haul freight). If you list your fleet auto insurer on the FMCSA filing, their policy can be pulled into IC accidents, even when the fleet policy wasn’t intended to cover them.
Final-mile cargo doesn’t behave like long-haul trucking. Policies built for big rigs often fail you in last-mile reality. Watch for:
Personal auto insurance is for personal use. If an independent contractor driver worked on a delivery when the collision happened, the personal policy will usually deny the claim.
Start shaping your renewal 60–90 days out. You can’t control the market, but you can control how your account looks to underwriters and how much you actually spend over a year. Use the steps below to cut claim noise, align coverage with how you operate, and make it easier for carriers to say “yes” at a fair price.
Final-mile can be difficult to insure because small details carry a lot of weight. Whether legal costs eat into your limit or an incorrect name on a federal filing, those details can turn a clean payout into a costly surprise. Make the fine print match how you actually operate.
This blog summarizes information delivered during a recent Webinar hosted by the Customized Logistics and Delivery Association (CLDA) featuring specialists from the Risk Strategies Logistics & Transportation Practice.
Connect with the Risk Strategies Logistics & Transportation team at transportation@risk‐strategies.com.
The contents of this article are for general informational purposes only and Risk Strategies Company makes no representation or warranty of any kind, express or implied, regarding the accuracy or completeness of any information contained herein. Any recommendations contained herein are intended to provide insight based on currently available information for consideration and should be vetted against applicable legal and business needs before application to a specific client.