
Concrete contractor exposure runs from flatwork and foundations to structural pours, decorative concrete, and tilt-up work. Settling, cracking, and structural failure can surface years after the job, which makes completed-operations and contract review especially important.
Ellie Insurance Group is an independent business insurance agency (founded 2014, headquartered in Tampa, Florida) that shops 100+ carrier markets to place concrete contractor insurance — typically general liability, workers' compensation, commercial auto, and tools/equipment coverage — for concrete contractor businesses. As an independent broker we compare real quotes side by side and handle the contract certificates (additional insured, waiver of subrogation, primary & noncontributory) that concrete contractor jobs require. Start an Instant Quote and a licensed agent shops your account across competing carriers.
Concrete carries an unusually long claim tail — settling, cracking, and slab failures can surface years after the pour, and structural or tilt-up work adds catastrophic collapse severity on top of that. A concrete program is built around the flatwork-vs.-structural split, pumping and rigging operations, and the completed-operations coverage that responds when a defect shows up long after the job closed.
Covered third-party injury, property damage, and completed operations from concrete work.
Florida construction employers generally need coverage with 1+ employees; class codes and excavation drive premium.
Trucks, trailers, dump trucks, plus hired and non-owned auto for crew driving for the business.
Mixers, pumps, screeds, forms, ladders, and rented equipment in transit and on site.
Materials in transit and at the jobsite before becoming part of the building.
Common requirement on commercial and structural contracts.
For chemical-handling, sealants, and any environmental exposure.
Workers' compensation is usually the non-negotiable line for a concrete contractor: Florida construction employers generally need it with one or more employees. Before you sign anything, see exactly how licensing, workers' comp law, and contract limits stack up in our Florida contractor insurance requirements guide.
These are illustrative examples of how losses tend to unfold for a concrete contractor, and which coverage usually responds. They are educational only — actual coverage depends on your policy terms, endorsements, and the facts of the claim.
A year after a driveway pour, the slab cracks and heaves and the homeowner alleges improper subgrade prep, demanding replacement.
Likely response: Completed-operations may respond to resulting damage to other property, but tearing out and re-pouring the defective slab itself is typically uncovered faulty workmanship.
A pressurized line on a boom pump fails and sprays wet concrete across a finished area and a parked vehicle.
Likely response: General liability typically responds to the third-party property damage caused by the operation.
Forms on a structural wall pour give way and a worker is struck and injured by falling material.
Likely response: Workers' compensation responds to the employee injury; documented formwork and shoring practices support both safety and WC underwriting.
Driveways, sidewalks, and slabs price differently than structural pours and tilt-up work.
Boom pumps, line pumps, and crane use change carrier appetite.
Trench depth and proximity to existing structures drive both rate and appetite.
Percent of subbed labor and whether subs carry their own GL/WC with proper endorsements.
3–5 years of currently valued loss runs. Cracking and settling patterns matter most.
Per-project aggregate, additional insured, waiver of subrogation, completed operations.
Two contractors in the same trade can pay very different premiums. These are the levers underwriters weigh most — and the ones you can often improve before renewal.
Structural pours and tilt-up rate well above driveways, sidewalks, and slabs due to collapse severity.
WC payroll by class code and annual receipts set the core exposure base for the program.
Boom pumps, line pumps, and crane use add exposure and can narrow appetite.
Trench depth and proximity to existing structures raise earth-movement exposure and pricing.
How much labor is subbed — and whether subs carry coverage — affects price and audit exposure.
A clean loss history — especially no cracking/settling or collapse claims — is a major pricing lever.
Want to see how concrete contractors compare to other trades? Our Florida contractor insurance cost by trade guide breaks down general liability and workers' comp price ranges side by side.
Holding a license does not satisfy a customer's insurance requirement, and a workers' comp exemption does not help if you actually have employees on payroll. Concrete is commonly subcontracted to GCs who demand a certificate, additional insured status, per-project aggregate, and proof of workers' comp before the pour is scheduled.
DBPR / CILB rules and local competency cards.
Construction generally triggers at 1+ employees.
GCs and owners set their own, often higher, requirements.
Running a mixed crew or subbing out adjacent work? We place coverage across the construction trades and coordinate certificates between them.
Multi-trade handyman programs with proper classification.
Tile, hardwood, LVP, carpet, and floor prep.
Hang, finish, texture, and acoustical ceilings.
Wood, vinyl, chain-link, aluminum, and gates.
Trimming, removal, stump grinding, and storm cleanup.
See the full contractor insurance hub, coverage stack, and certificate guidance.
Broad contractor coverage and certificate support.
Starting point for most contractor programs.
Required for Florida construction with 1+ employees.
Trucks, trailers, and hired/non-owned auto.
Licensing, workers' comp law, and contract limits explained.
Additional insureds, waivers, and primary wording.
Florida GL and workers' comp price ranges by trade.
Coverage descriptions and regulatory figures on this page are general summaries reviewed against the references above and are not a statement of coverage, legal advice, or a guarantee of eligibility or price. Last reviewed . Requirements and policy terms change — always confirm current rules with the relevant agency and verify coverage against the actual policy and a licensed agent.
Beyond '$1M GL' — the actual additional insured, waiver, primary/non-contributory, and certificate-holder language that wins jobs.
Per-industry GL benchmarks: what contractors, retail, restaurants, and pros really pay — and what drives the price up or down.
Class codes, experience mods, and payroll caps explained — plus how to dispute an audit that's wrong.
What every box on an ACORD 100+ actually means — and what to ask for when a vendor or GC requests one.
As an independent agency we shop 100+ admitted and surplus-lines carrier markets — so the carrier competes for your business, not the other way around.




































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