Tools & Equipment Insurance

What Is a Contractor’s Equipment Floater?

What Is a Contractor’s Equipment Floater? — everything contractors need to know to protect their tools and equipment.

Get My Contractor Quote

Call (234) 231-8427 — Mon–Fri 9AM–5PM EST

The Coverage Form That Follows Your Equipment Anywhere

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.

← Tools & Equipment Insurance Guide

Definition: Equipment Floater

A contractor’s equipment floater is a type of inland marine insurance policy that covers contractor-owned tools and equipment at any location — job sites, in transit, in storage, or at your yard. The term ‘floater’ reflects that the coverage ‘floats’ with the property wherever it goes, rather than being tied to a fixed location.

What It Covers vs. What It Doesn’t

Equipment floaters cover theft, fire, vandalism, accidental physical damage, and damage during transit. They typically exclude wear and tear, mechanical breakdown, and (in most cases) employee theft. Some forms exclude flood damage and earthquake — check your specific policy.

Scheduled Form vs. Blanket Form

Floaters are written on either a scheduled basis (each piece listed with agreed value) or a blanket basis (one total limit for all equipment). Scheduled forms are preferred for heavy equipment where individual items are worth $10,000+. Blanket forms work well for large tool inventories where individual items are worth less.

Equipment Floater vs. Builders Risk

These are both inland marine products but cover different things. A builders risk policy covers the structure under construction. An equipment floater covers contractor-owned tools and equipment. A contractor on a job site may need both — builders risk for the project itself and an equipment floater for their tools.

Who Should Have an Equipment Floater

Any contractor carrying more than $5,000 in tools, owning heavy equipment, using rented equipment regularly, or working on job sites where tools could be left overnight should have an equipment floater. It’s one of the most cost-effective coverages available relative to the protection it provides.

Get My Contractor Quote

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a contractor’s equipment floater the same as tools insurance?
Yes — contractors’ tools and equipment insurance, inland marine insurance, and an equipment floater are all terms for essentially the same coverage. The specific policy form and name varies by carrier, but the coverage concept is the same.
How is an equipment floater different from property insurance?
Property insurance covers contents at a fixed, specified location. An equipment floater covers property wherever it is — the defining ‘floater’ characteristic. For contractors whose equipment moves constantly, the floater is the correct coverage form.
Do I need an equipment floater if I have a BOP?
A BOP (Business Owner’s Policy) includes some property coverage, but typically only at your business premises and with limited off-premises coverage. For contractors whose equipment is primarily off-premises, a standalone equipment floater provides far better protection.
What is the maximum limit available on an equipment floater?
Equipment floaters can be written for very high limits — $500,000 to $1M+ for large contractors with heavy equipment fleets. Your agent can access specialty markets for very high-value equipment inventories.
Can an equipment floater be added to an existing policy?
Yes — a contractor’s equipment floater can be added as a standalone policy or as part of a commercial package policy alongside your GL and commercial auto. Packaging it together often generates a multi-line discount.

Protect Your Tools & Equipment Today

Get My Contractor Quote
Speak To An Agent — (234) 231-8427