Tools & Equipment Insurance
How Deductibles Work on Tools & Equipment Policies
How Deductibles Work on Tools & Equipment Policies — everything contractors need to know to protect their tools and equipment.
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Choosing the Right Deductible for Your Tools Coverage
Your tools and equipment are your livelihood. A single theft or job site loss can sideline your business for weeks. Tools and equipment insurance — also called inland marine or a contractor’s equipment floater — covers your gear wherever it goes: in your truck, on the job site, or in storage.
What the Deductible Means
The deductible is the amount you pay out-of-pocket on a covered claim before insurance pays. If tools worth $5,000 are stolen and your deductible is $500, your insurer pays $4,500. A higher deductible lowers your annual premium; a lower deductible means more coverage but higher cost.
Common Deductible Options
Tools policies typically offer deductibles of $250, $500, $1,000, or $2,500. Most contractors find the $500 deductible to be a good balance — meaningful premium savings vs. an out-of-pocket amount that’s manageable for most loss scenarios.
Per-Occurrence vs. Per-Item
Most tools policies apply the deductible per occurrence (per claim event), not per item. If multiple tools are stolen in one break-in, you pay one deductible for the entire loss — not a deductible for each stolen tool.
Small Claims and Your Loss History
For small losses near your deductible amount, consider paying out-of-pocket rather than filing a claim. An at-claim premium increase can cost more over 3 years than the claim payout. A general rule: file for losses significantly above your deductible; absorb small losses yourself.
Separate Deductibles for Heavy Equipment
Heavy equipment scheduled on an equipment floater often has a higher deductible ($1,000–$5,000) than hand and power tools. This reflects the higher value of the equipment and keeps the premium manageable on expensive machinery.