Commercial Auto Insurance
Commercial Auto Insurance provided by GK MF Invest Private Limited .
As a businessowner, you need insurance coverages for the cars, trucks, vans or other vehicles you use in your business as you do for vehicles used for personal travel. Your Businessowners Policy (BOP) does not provide any coverage for vehicles, so you must have a separate policy.
Do I Need Commercial Auto Insurance?
Whether you use your own car or a fleet of pickups, box trucks and even trailers to get the job done, you need to stay financially protected by getting the commercial auto insurance coverage for liability, personal injury/medical, collision and more — to keep your business moving forward. Plus, if your employees use their own vehicles to perform deliveries, make sales visits, or run errands for your business, you could be liable for any accidents they cause. The line between a personal vehicle and a commercial vehicle is sometimes unclear, we have shared the difference between them below.
The difference between personal and commercial auto insurance
For small businesses, the line between what is considered a personal vehicle and a commercial vehicle is often blurry. Sometimes small business owners and employees use their personal vehicles to travel to job sites, transport equipment or deliver goods.
Personal auto insurance policies almost always exclude business use. That means you’re not covered if you get into an accident while driving for work (with the exception of your commute).
The main difference between personal and commercial auto insurance is who owns the vehicle. If your business owns a vehicle, it must be covered by commercial auto insurance.
Commercial auto insurance covers accidents that occur while you or your employees are driving a company vehicle. While both personal and commercial auto policies pay for legal and medical bills related to auto accidents, commercial auto insurance usually covers higher claims, different types of vehicles, and more complex legal issues.
A commercial policy typically insures all the business’s employees as additional insureds, which means every employee with a valid license can use the vehicle.
If you’re a sole proprietor who owns a vehicle used primarily for business, you may need this policy. A commercial policy typically has higher liability limits than personal auto insurance. It can cover vehicles used to:
- Transport goods or equipment
- Drive clients or employees
- Perform a service that you’re paid for
- Charge passengers a fee to ride in your vehicle
- Charge people a fee to transport goods in your vehicle
- Haul heavy, work-related loads
- Tow a trailer used for business