Electrician Insurance in New Jersey
New Jersey requires Workers' Compensation for electricians. See the checklist below for the full breakdown and costs.
New Jersey requirements
| Coverage | Required? | Minimum | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Workers' Compensation | Required | Statutory | Required once you have W-2 employees; statutory limits apply. |
State regulator: New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance
Coverage checklist
| Coverage | Requirement | Annual cost |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial AutoCA | Required | $1,508–$2,900/yr |
| General LiabilityGL | Required | $522–$1,044/yr |
| Workers' CompensationWC | Required | $2,552–$6,380/yr |
| Inland Marine / Tools & EquipmentIM | Recommended | $348–$1,044/yr |
| Business Owner's PolicyBOP | Optional | $696–$1,740/yr |
| Commercial PropertyCP | Optional | $696–$2,552/yr |
| Professional Liability / E&OPL/E&O | Optional | $696–$1,624/yr |
Cost breakdown
- ·Vehicle type (van vs. truck)
- ·Driving radius
- ·Tools carried
- ·Driver records
Required to legally drive a work vehicle; personal auto excludes business use.
- ·Number of electricians on crew
- ·Residential vs. commercial work
- ·Revenue size
- ·Claims history
Required by most states for licensed electrical contractors and by many general contractors before you can bid work.
- ·Payroll size
- ·Experience modification rate
- ·Residential vs. commercial
- ·Number of employees
Required in nearly every state once you have W-2 employees; even solo electricians often carry it because the work is hazardous.
- ·Value of tools and testers
- ·Job site theft risk
- ·Stored in vehicle vs. locked shop
Covers expensive hand tools, testers, and ladders stolen from a job site or vehicle.
- ·Shop location value
- ·Owned inventory
- ·Revenue
Worth it if you lease a shop or store significant inventory.
- ·Building ownership
- ·Inventory value
- ·Location
Only if you own or lease a shop/warehouse.
- ·Design vs. install work
- ·Contract values
Relevant if you provide design/engineering specs, not just installation.
Best carriers for electrician
Electrician insurance in New Jersey — FAQ
Do electricians need insurance?+
Yes. Electricians are considered high-risk because faulty wiring can cause fire, injury, or property damage. General liability, workers' comp, and commercial auto are the core policies most electricians carry, and many states require them to keep a contractor's license.
How much is general liability insurance for an electrician?+
General liability for a small electrical contracting business typically runs $450–$900 per year. Larger crews, commercial work, and prior claims push premiums toward the high end of the range or above.
Is workers' comp required for electricians?+
In almost every state, yes — once you have W-2 employees. Because electrical work is hazardous, even sole proprietors often carry workers' comp. Texas is the only state where workers' comp is optional, and Ohio, North Dakota, Washington, and Wyoming run it through a state fund.
What does general liability cover for an electrician?+
It covers third-party bodily injury and property damage caused by your work — for example, a customer tripping over your cords, or a wiring mistake that damages a homeowner's property. It does not cover your own tools or employees' injuries (those need inland marine and workers' comp).
Do I need insurance to get an electrician's license?+
Many states and counties require proof of general liability insurance (and sometimes workers' comp) before issuing or renewing an electrical contractor license. Check your state DOI or licensing board for the exact minimums.
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