Surety Bonds
Surety Bond vs. Insurance — Key Differences Every Contractor Must Know
Surety Bond vs. Insurance — Key Differences Every Contractor Must Know — everything contractors need to know about surety bonds.
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Two Products That Sound Similar but Work in Completely Opposite Ways
Surety bonds are a required part of doing business for most licensed contractors. Whether you need a license bond to operate legally, a bid bond to compete for public projects, or a performance bond to secure a major contract — Trade Safe helps contractors get bonded fast at competitive rates.
Who Each Protects
Insurance protects you (the insured/principal) against covered losses. General liability pays when you cause injury or property damage. Workers comp pays when your employee is injured. In each case, the insurance company pays and doesn’t recover from you. Surety bonds protect the obligee — the party requiring the bond — against your failure to perform. The surety pays the obligee and then recovers from you.
The Indemnity Distinction
This is the fundamental difference: insurance claims are not recoverable from the insured. Bond claims are recoverable from the principal. When an insurer pays a covered GL claim, they don’t come after you for reimbursement. When a surety pays a bond claim, they pursue full recovery from you through your indemnity agreement.
Underwriting Approach
Insurance is priced on statistical loss probability — your trade, claims history, payroll, revenues. Surety is priced on financial reliability — credit, financial strength, track record. Insurance underwriters ask ‘how likely is a claim?’ Surety underwriters ask ‘can this contractor pay us back if we have to pay a claim?’
Both Are Typically Required
Most contractor licensing and project requirements mandate both. A state licensing board typically requires a license bond AND liability insurance. A project owner typically requires performance/payment bonds AND GL/auto/workers comp insurance. They serve different protective functions and neither substitutes for the other.
Practical Differences for Contractors
When a GL claim is filed: the insurer defends you, pays covered losses, and the matter is resolved. When a bond claim is filed: the surety investigates, may pay the obligee, and then comes after you for reimbursement. Bond claims are far more consequential financially than most insurance claims — avoid them at all costs.