The overlooked coverage gaps that can cost contractors time, money, and major project headaches.
Construction businesses face a level of risk unlike any other industry. Every project brings new job sites, new subcontractors, new contracts, and new exposures — and insurance programs need to evolve just as quickly.
But even well-run construction firms often have unintended gaps in their coverage. These gaps usually aren’t obvious until a claim hits, and by then, it’s too late to fix.
Below are 10 of the most common — and most costly — insurance gaps that contractors encounter, plus what you can do to avoid them.
1. Relying on Property Insurance Instead of Builder’s Risk
One of the biggest misconceptions in construction is that a contractor’s general property policy will cover a project under construction.
It won’t.
Property insurance typically applies only to completed structures or your own premises. Projects in progress need Builder’s Risk Insurance — the policy specifically designed to cover materials, equipment, and structures during construction.
Without it, losses from:
- Weather
- Theft
- Vandalism
- Fire
- Partially installed materials
…may not be covered at all.
2. Missing or Incomplete Additional Insured Endorsements
General contractors often assume that subcontractors’ policies automatically make the GC an additional insured.
Not necessarily.
Some COIs list the GC as additional insured, but the certificate alone is not enough — what matters is the actual endorsement attached to the subcontractor’s policy.
If the endorsement isn’t there, you may:
- Lose defense coverage
- Lose indemnification
- Be forced to pay out of pocket
- Face uncovered claims
Always verify endorsements, not just certificates.
3. Using Uninsured or Underinsured Subcontractors
Construction firms often unknowingly pick up liability for uninsured subs, including:
- Workers’ compensation
- General liability
- Auto liability
- Statutory penalties
Even one uninsured subcontractor injury can drastically impact your insurance costs.
If a subcontractor doesn’t carry proper coverage, your policy becomes the insurer — and your premiums, claims history, and experience mod take the hit.
4. Improper Classification of Employees
Classification errors cause:
- Incorrect workers’ comp rates
- Improper GL exposure
- Underreported or overreported risk
- Premium increases
- Audit corrections
Examples of common mistakes:
- Classifying supervisors as clerical
- Coding laborers as carpenters (or vice versa)
- Placing sales staff in field codes
- Incorrectly classifying shop operations
Small misclassifications can cost thousands at audit.
4. Improper Classification of Employees
Classification errors cause:
- Incorrect workers’ comp rates
- Improper GL exposure
- Underreported or overreported risk
- Premium increases
- Audit corrections
Examples of common mistakes:
- Classifying supervisors as clerical
- Coding laborers as carpenters (or vice versa)
- Placing sales staff in field codes
- Incorrectly classifying shop operations
Small misclassifications can cost thousands at audit.
5. Not Having Coverage for Tools and Contractor’s Equipment
Tools and equipment are often the most exposed assets on a job site — and also the most misunderstood from a coverage perspective.
Common issues include:
- Assuming property policies cover tools
- Not scheduling high-value equipment
- Not carrying inland marine coverage
- No coverage for tools in transit
- Missing rental reimbursement
If tools move, get stolen, or get damaged off-site, you need contractor’s equipment coverage, not standard property insurance.
6. Inadequate Pollution Liability Coverage
Pollution claims aren’t just environmental disasters — they often involve everyday construction operations:
- fuel spills
- Paint overspray
- Mold exposure
- Contaminated materials
- Improper disposal
General liability policies have strict pollution exclusions. Without Contractor’s Pollution Liability, you may have no coverage for these events.
7. Overlooking Non-Owned and Hired Auto Liability
Contractors routinely use:
- Rented vehicles
- Personal vehicles for company business
- Jobsite deliveries
- Vendor vehicles
If an employee causes an accident while using their personal vehicle for company tasks, your business can be pulled into the lawsuit.
Hired & Non-Owned Auto (HNOA) coverage protects you from these exposures — but many contractors don’t realize it’s missing.
8. Not Carrying Cyber Liability (Yes, Even in Construction)
Construction firms are increasingly targeted for:
- Wire transfer fraud
- Ransomware
- Phishing attacks
- Contract manipulation
- Vendor impersonation
- ACH redirection scams
Cyber claims are now among the fastest-growing losses in the construction industry.If your business uses email, electronic payments, or online documents (i.e., every modern contractor), cyber insurance is no longer optional.
9. Insufficient Umbrella/Excess Limits
The construction industry faces some of the highest liability risks of any sector:
- Serious injuries
- Auto accidents
- Subcontractor claims
- Property damage
- Contractual requirements
Yet many contractors still carry outdated limits that no longer match:
- Job sizes
- Project complexity
- Legal environment
- GC/owner requirements
Lawsuits continue to increase in frequency and severity — and umbrella limits help protect against catastrophic losses.
10. No Coverage for Defective Work or Completed Operations Issues
GL policies do not cover your work if it is defective — they cover damage resulting from the defect, not fixing the defect itself.
Common misunderstandings:
- “If our work fails, insurance covers the repair.” (It doesn’t.)
- “If a sub’s error causes damage, our GL covers it.” (Not always.)
- “Completed operations automatically includes workmanship issues.” (Depends on endorsements.)
Understanding what is — and isn’t — covered in completed operations is critical to avoiding costly disputes.
The Bottom Line
Construction insurance is complex, and even well-designed programs can have hidden gaps that create major exposures. The key is knowing where gaps tend to appear — subcontractors, contracts, class codes, schedules, pollution exclusions, cyber risk, completed operations — and reviewing these areas regularly.
The more proactive you are, the fewer surprises you’ll encounter when a claim occurs.
If you’d like help reviewing your insurance program for potential coverage gaps,
our team can walk you through the areas contractors most often miss.
Looking forward to how these updates will modernize processes and strengthen industry reputation!