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Commercial Umbrella Insurance for residential remodeling contractors

An umbrella policy extends your GL and auto limits for remodeling contractors who work on high-value homes, engage with general contractors who require higher combined limits, or face significant completed-operations accumulation across many projects.

Commercial Umbrella Insurance — residential remodeling

What it covers

  • Excess limits above general liability
  • Excess limits above commercial auto
  • Defense costs beyond underlying policy limits
  • Claims that exhaust underlying GL limits on high-value renovation projects
  • Certificate compliance for GC umbrella requirements
  • Additional limits for contractors with high completed-ops accumulation

Who it's for

  • Remodeling contractors working on high-value residential projects
  • Contractors working for GCs who require $5M or more in combined limits
  • Operations with significant completed-ops accumulation across many projects
  • Remodelers where a single large claim could exhaust GL limits

Why CCA

  • Umbrella structured to sit cleanly above your GL and auto
  • Limits sized to your project types and certificate requirements
  • Coordinated with underlying policies so there's no gap in coverage
Commercial Umbrella Insurance — FAQ

Common questions about commercial umbrella insurance

$1M to $2M umbrella is common for residential remodelers doing standard projects. Contractors working on high-value homes ($1M+ projects) or for GCs who require $5M combined limits need correspondingly higher umbrella limits.

Yes — the umbrella extends above your GL per-occurrence limit, which includes completed-ops coverage. If a significant completed-ops claim from a renovation project exceeds your GL limit, the umbrella covers the excess.

Cost is driven by crew size, payroll, revenue, project types, states worked, and loss history. We quote your actual operation in about 15 minutes.

Yes. Contractors Choice Agency is licensed in all 50 states and writes residential remodeling programs nationwide.

Typically 15 minutes on a call. Larger or multi-state programs may take a day or two, but we move fast.

Often yes. We have admitted and E&S markets for contractors with prior completed-ops claims, high-value project exposure, or other issues.

Usually yes. A coordinated program closes gaps and is typically cheaper and cleaner than separate policies — especially at claim time.

A.M. Best ratings reflect a carrier's financial strength. We place coverage with A-rated carriers so the money is there when a completed-ops claim, injury, or CPL claim hits.

Yes — if structured correctly. Completed-ops GL covers claims arising after renovation is done, like water intrusion from a shower installation or a waterproofing failure.

Remodeling involves multiple trade codes — carpentry, drywall, tile, and others. Correct classification for your actual crew mix is critical for accurate workers' comp rating and avoiding audit surprises.

Yes. CPL (contractors pollution liability) covers bodily injury and property damage from lead paint and asbestos disturbed during renovation work — exposures that standard GL excludes.

Yes — inland marine follows your crew to job sites, in transit, and in storage. Standard commercial property doesn't cover tools off-premises.

You should require subs to carry their own GL and workers' comp and provide certificates. Your GL covers your operations — sub exposures need to be addressed in the policy structure.

Yes — especially on high-value projects or when GCs require higher combined limits on certificates. An umbrella provides those limits cost-effectively.

Yes. We coordinate GL and CPL so there's no gap between operations coverage and pollution coverage — critical for remodelers working in homes built before 1980.

Yes. We write programs for new remodeling businesses — helping you get the GL and workers' comp needed for licensing and certificate compliance from day one.

Ready to protect your remodeling business?

Get a 15-minute quote from specialists who understand residential remodeling — completed operations, crew workers' comp, lead and asbestos exposure, and the tools your crews depend on.