Residential Roofing Contractor Insurance
Residential roofing contractors face a distinct insurance profile driven by height exposure, subcontractor reliance, and frequent homeowner interaction. Underwriters evaluate this class based on crew size, annual revenue, subcontractor percentage, and claims history over the trailing five years.
Risks Specific to This Sub-Trade
Fall-from-height claims represent the single largest liability driver, with ladder and scaffold incidents generating six-figure verdicts routinely. Property damage to existing structures during tear-off, including interior water intrusion from unexpected rain, creates high-frequency GL claims. Completed operations exposure persists for years after installation, as leak callbacks and wind-related failures trigger litigation. Auto liability compounds the risk profile when crews tow heavy trailers loaded with shingle bundles through residential neighborhoods.
Coverages This Sub-Trade Needs
Carriers That Write This Sub-Trade
Standard admitted carriers will write residential roofing accounts with clean loss histories and under $5M in revenue. Larger operations or those with elevated loss ratios often land in the E&S market with carriers like Kinsale, BTIS, or Colony Specialty. Preferred accounts with strong safety programs may qualify for A-rated admitted markets such as Employers or CNA.
What Disqualifies an Account
Accounts with three or more lost-time workers comp claims in three years are extremely difficult to place. Contractors performing over 50% subcontracted labor without requiring certificates of insurance from subs face near-universal declination. Prior coverage cancellations for non-payment or material misrepresentation effectively eliminate admitted market options.
Frequently Asked Questions
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