Certificate of Insurance
Permitting offices, GCs, and property managers increasingly require proof of insurance before you start work. Get your COI issued instantly after you bind.
A certificate of insurance (COI) is proof that you carry active coverage — and in the electrical trade, it's often the document standing between you and starting a job. Permitting offices, GCs, property managers, and even homeowners increasingly ask for one before work begins.
Your certificate typically lists your general liability limits, your workers compensation coverage if you have employees, your commercial auto coverage if applicable, and any additional insured or waiver of subrogation endorsements that a specific client or contract requires.
Many commercial contracts require the GC or property owner to be named as an additional insured on your policy, along with a waiver of subrogation. Getting this wrong — or forgetting to request it — is one of the most common reasons a job gets held up at the last minute. We can set up blanket additional insured endorsements so you're not scrambling for a new certificate every time a new job requires one.
Once you bind coverage, your certificate of insurance is issued instantly. There's no waiting period — you can send it to a permitting office, GC, or property manager the same day you enroll.
If you need a certificate for a specific job, a permit application, or a new GC relationship, our licensed agents can move quickly. Tell us what the job or contract requires and we'll make sure your policy — and your certificate — match it exactly.
Get your free quote
Our licensed agents build your custom quote — typically same business day.
FAQ
Your COI is issued instantly once you bind coverage — ready to send to any permitting office, GC, property manager, or client the same day.
Many municipalities require proof of insurance as part of the permit application. Requirements vary by jurisdiction, so it's worth confirming with your local permitting office.
Additional insured status extends part of your liability coverage to a GC, property owner, or client named on your policy. Most commercial contracts require it, along with a waiver of subrogation.
Yes. A blanket additional insured endorsement lets you add any client or GC as needed without submitting a new request for every single job — this saves time on frequent commercial work.
Yes. Data, security, fire alarm, and other low-voltage specialists are frequently asked for certificates by commercial clients and integrators, just like traditional electrical contractors.
Licensed agents build your custom quote — typically same business day. Review, enroll, and get your COI instantly.