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Contractor Insurance Requirements That Protect Your Home Investment
Description
Contractor insurance requirements protect you from the financial catastrophe most homeowners never see coming: when a worker gets hurt on your property and there's no valid insurance coverage to catch it. Those six-figure medical bills and lost wages don't disappear. They land on whoever forgot to check. And under premises liability law, that person can be you.
GET YOUR FREE INSURANCE PROTECTION CHECKLIST
Bill Reid walks you through the two insurance policies that stand between you and disaster — general liability and workers compensation — and gives you the exact four-step verification process to confirm coverage is real and current, not just claimed.
WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER
Most homeowners assume if someone gets hurt during construction, that's the contractor's problem. They've got insurance. And when everything is in order, that's true. But construction has a hard rule underneath it: when something goes wrong and there's no valid coverage to catch it, the law goes looking for the person with the assets. On your project, that person is you.
This episode picks up directly from Episode 62, the Cash Trap conversation that struck a nerve with listeners. The contractor who offers to knock 10 percent off if you pay cash is funding that discount partly by skipping insurance. The discount felt like found money. Today is the day that bill actually comes due.
Bill breaks down why you're exposed in the first place. Premises liability means as the property owner, you owe a basic duty of care to workers on your land. The more you micromanage the crew, the more responsibility you can quietly pull onto yourself. But step back and let a competent general contractor run the site — which is their job — and you genuinely lower your own exposure.
Then there's the prime contractor rule. When a worker gets hurt and there's no workers comp standing behind them, the responsibility rolls uphill. If there's no insured contractor in the chain, the injured worker's claim can roll all the way up to you. Your homeowners insurance often won't help. Many policies specifically exclude injuries tied to construction work, and even when personal liability coverage kicks in, the limits are usually modest against claims that can run well past six figures.
Bill introduces the two policies built to stand in front of all of it. General liability insurance covers the damage and injury the contractor's work causes to other people and their property. It commonly starts at one million dollars of coverage — that's the floor for a serious operation, not a luxury add-on. It responds to accidents, contractual liability, events caused by employees or subs, and the products and work the contractor produces.
The part most homeowners never think to ask about: completed operations coverage. Some failures don't show up for months. A brand new deck looks gorgeous at the final walkthrough, then collapses at a backyard party six months later. Completed operations coverage is the thing that answers for that.
Here's the catch: most states do not require general liability as a condition of holding a contractor's license. It's a patchwork, and you cannot count on the rules to protect you. If your state won't require it, you require it. Make written proof of liability coverage a flat condition of getting the job.
Workers compensation is the policy that ends up protecting you the most, even though it's got the worker's name on it, not yours. Workers comp pays an injured worker's medical bills and lost wages when they get hurt on the job, and nobody has to prove whose fault it was. It just pays. And in exchange, that worker gives up the right to sue.
Take that comp away and there's nothing keeping that worker or their attorney from looking straight at your house as the next