Commercial Auto Insurance
DOT Insurance Requirements for Contractor Vehicles
Dot Insurance Requirements Vehicles — everything contractors need to know to stay protected on the road and on the job.
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When DOT Rules Apply to Your Contractor Fleet
As a contractor, your vehicles are central to your business — hauling materials, reaching job sites, and transporting equipment. Commercial auto insurance protects your trucks, vans, and specialized vehicles from liability, collision, and comprehensive losses that personal policies won’t cover.
What Triggers DOT Requirements
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) and DOT regulations apply to commercial vehicles over 10,001 lbs GVWR used in interstate commerce, or lighter vehicles transporting hazardous materials. Many contractor dump trucks and heavy equipment haulers fall under these rules.
FMCSA Minimum Liability Requirements
For non-hazmat freight carriers under 10,001 lbs: $750,000 minimum. For vehicles over 10,001 lbs in interstate commerce: $750,000 to $5M depending on cargo type. Most contractors hauling materials in large dump trucks need at least $750,000 in liability.
USDOT Number and Operating Authority
If you operate commercial vehicles in interstate commerce above the weight thresholds, you need a USDOT number. For-hire carriers also need MC (Motor Carrier) authority. Even intrastate haulers in many states need a state DOT number and must maintain minimum coverage.
Filing Requirements (MCS-90 Endorsement)
If you fall under FMCSA jurisdiction, your insurer must file an MCS-90 endorsement with the FMCSA — a guarantee that your insurer will cover required minimums even if you violate policy terms. Failure to have this filing can result in operating authority revocation.
State DOT Rules Vary
Even if you only operate intrastate, most states have DOT regulations for commercial vehicles above certain weights. These may require higher liability minimums, annual vehicle inspections, driver log books (ELD mandates), and drug & alcohol testing programs.