Numbers first, because that's how this guide is built. Here is the cost structure of commercial auto insurance in California in 2026 in roughly the form most owners actually buy:
- Median annual premium per work truck in our book — Stockton, San Jose, San Rafael combined: $1,800–$2,600 for a single unit, depending on radius and class.
- Per-unit premium drop with fleet scale: a fleet of 5 typically pays 8–14% less per unit than a single-unit policy, holding everything else constant. A fleet of 10 picks up another 4–8% per-unit discount. Above 10 units the conversation becomes a fleet program with experience-rated pricing.
- Liability limit choice: $1M combined single limit (CSL) is the small-business default. $2M CSL adds roughly 18–28% to the liability portion of the premium. Above $2M you usually layer an umbrella over the auto + GL stack rather than buying higher primary auto limits.
- Physical damage (comp + collision) on the work truck adds $500–$1,400 per unit per year depending on truck value and deductible. On older trucks (>10 years, lower value) many small-business owners drop physical damage and run liability-only.
- Hired and non-owned auto liability endorsement: usually $80–$220 per year flat. Cheap protection for the surprisingly common scenario of an employee running a company errand in their own car.
This guide walks the numbers in detail, fits them to four typical California small-business profiles, and explains why we lead with The Hartford for clean standard-class commercial auto risks and route the rest through other carriers in our broker book. If you'd rather skip the explanation and just get a quote, call 209-670-1556 or request a quote online. We'll need vehicle details, driver records, business class, and rough radius of operation to start.
What commercial auto covers — and what it doesn't
A standard California commercial auto policy is structured similarly to a personal auto policy, but with broader vehicle definitions, broader use definitions, and the named insured being a business entity rather than an individual. The standard parts:
- Liability — bodily injury and property damage to others. Almost always written as a Combined Single Limit (CSL) — say, $1,000,000 — meaning a single bucket covers BI and PD per occurrence. Less commonly written as split limits ($250K/$500K/$100K).
- Physical damage — comprehensive (theft, fire, vandalism, weather, glass) and collision (you-hit-something, something-hit-you). Optional in California for commercial vehicles; mandatory if there's a lender on the vehicle or a lease.
- Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist. Required to be offered in California; can be rejected in writing. For a business with employee drivers, we usually recommend keeping it.
- Medical Payments / Personal Injury Protection. Small limit, covers driver/occupant minor medical regardless of fault.
- Hired and Non-Owned Auto Liability (HNOA). The endorsement that covers business liability when an employee uses their personal car for company errands, or when the company rents a vehicle. Often missed by small businesses.
- Trailer interchange / motor truck cargo / garagekeepers — specialty coverages relevant to specific industries (auto repair, towing, trucking — for which see our commercial truck insurance guide).
What commercial auto does NOT cover:
- Long-haul trucking exposures beyond what the standard CSL contemplates — that's a separate trucking program, see our trucking insurance California cost page.
- Cargo damage in transit unless cargo coverage is endorsed.
- Liability for tools and equipment in the vehicle. That's an inland marine policy or a contractor's tools and equipment endorsement on the GL.
- Personal use exposures the named-insured business doesn't have authority over — i.e., an employee's purely personal trip in their own car is the employee's problem, not the company's.
The most useful exercise for a small-business owner thinking about commercial auto is to map every vehicle the business uses (owned, leased, employee-driven, rented) against every use type (delivery, sales, transport of employees, transport of tools, transport of customers) and confirm at least one coverage section addresses each cell. Most of the gaps I find on existing policies are in the HNOA and rented-vehicle areas — not because the policy is bad, but because the endorsement was never added.
One overlap question to clear up: commercial auto vs. personal auto with business-use endorsement. If the vehicle is titled to an individual (not a business) and used for incidental business — driving to the occasional client meeting, hauling materials a few times a month — a personal auto policy with a business-use endorsement may be enough. Once the vehicle is titled to a business, has employee drivers other than the named insured, transports goods or people for hire, or has a logo and tools-on-board, you're in commercial auto territory. Our commercial vs personal business-use comparison walks through the specific decision tree.
Cost bands by fleet size and business class — with the San Jose 880-corridor work-truck pattern
Here is the table I keep on my desk for ballpark commercial auto pricing in 2026 California, by fleet size and business class. These are typical per-unit and total bands for clean drivers (no major violations in 3 years) and standard-class businesses.
| Fleet size | Business class | Per-unit annual premium | Total fleet premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 unit | Handyman / small repair | $1,400 – $2,200 | $1,400 – $2,200 |
| 1 unit | Landscape / grounds maintenance | $1,650 – $2,500 | $1,650 – $2,500 |
| 1 unit | Plumber / electrician (licensed) | $1,800 – $2,800 | $1,800 – $2,800 |
| 1 unit | Local delivery / courier | $2,000 – $3,200 | $2,000 – $3,200 |
| 2–5 units | General contractor (small) | $1,650 – $2,400 | $3,300 – $12,000 |
| 2–5 units | Commercial cleaning service | $1,500 – $2,200 | $3,000 – $11,000 |
| 2–5 units | Catering / food delivery | $2,100 – $3,200 | $4,200 – $16,000 |
| 5–10 units | Multi-class small business | $1,500 – $2,300 | $7,500 – $23,000 |
| 10+ units | Fleet program (experience-rated) | Quoted individually | — |
The premium drop from 1-unit to 5-unit isn't dramatic per unit — about 8–14%. The bigger gain at small-fleet scale is administrative: one renewal, one billing, one COI process, one driver MVR refresh cycle. For a contractor adding their second and third trucks in 2026, that consolidation saves real time, even if the per-unit insurance savings are modest.
The San Jose 880-corridor work-truck pattern
One particular concentration we underwrite weekly: small-business owners running work trucks along the 880 corridor between San Jose and Hayward — handymen, drywall crews, electricians, landscape companies, mobile detailers — whose radius of operation routinely covers Santa Clara, Alameda, and southern Contra Costa counties.
The 880-corridor risk profile is specific: high traffic density, long average commute time (a Santa Clara handyman pulling jobs in San Leandro might be in the truck 90 minutes a day in traffic), high accident frequency in the rated zone, and high uninsured-motorist exposure. Carriers price the 880 corridor at the higher end of the bands above. Hartford writes it; their underwriting accepts the radius declaration without flag for clean drivers. A few standard auto carriers will not write the corridor at all for commercial use.
What we tell our 880-corridor commercial-auto clients to do: declare the radius accurately at the time of quote, even if it's higher than what cheaper carriers would accept. A misdeclared radius is a claim-denial event waiting to happen. Pay the slightly higher premium, get the coverage that actually responds at claim time. We've placed a meaningful number of San Jose-Stockton-Tri-Valley fleets through Hartford specifically because the 880 corridor needs honest radius coverage, and Hartford doesn't blink at it.
For an East San Jose contractor running 3 trucks Tuesday through Saturday, with two W-2 employee drivers, a 75-mile radius declaration, and clean MVRs on all three drivers, our typical 2026 quote is roughly $5,800–$7,200 for the fleet — $1M CSL liability, basic physical damage on the newer two trucks, liability-only on the older one, HNOA endorsement included.
Get a Hartford commercial auto quote — fleet of 1 or fleet of 10. Bring vehicle VINs, driver records, radius, and business class. We'll pull MVRs and have a binding number same day for clean placements. No broker fees on standard policies — most clients qualify.
Get a Hartford Quote Call 209-670-1556Driver records, MVR thresholds, and the most common rejected-quote scenario
The single most common reason a commercial auto quote comes back materially higher than expected — or comes back declined — is a driver MVR (Motor Vehicle Record) that doesn't match the carrier's appetite. Commercial auto underwriting is sensitive to driver records in a way personal auto often isn't. Carriers pull MVRs at quote and again at renewal; one major violation in the past three years on the wrong driver can move the entire fleet to a different carrier or pricing tier.
Here is the rough Hartford appetite I work with for clean commercial auto placement, applied to every driver listed on the policy:
- 0 violations in 3 years: standard pricing, fastest turnaround
- 1 minor violation (small-speed, equipment, no-injury) in 3 years: standard pricing, no surcharge typically
- 2 minor violations in 3 years: surcharge or moved to non-standard tier
- 1 at-fault accident in 3 years: surcharge applied; vehicle still placeable
- 1 major violation (DUI, reckless, hit-and-run, suspension) in 3 years: Hartford typically declines that driver; vehicle moves to specialty market with that driver excluded or replaced
- Multiple major violations in 3 years: specialty markets only; fleet may be uninsurable until driver changes are made
This is one reason the conversation about driver hiring matters as much as the policy choice. A clean fleet with one new W-2 driver who has a recent DUI can flip the renewal pricing. The tactical answer is usually one of: (a) excluding that driver from the policy and not letting them operate company vehicles, (b) running them through their own personal SR-22 cycle until the violation is older — see our SR-22 cost guide and DUI insurance walkthrough — or (c) accepting the surcharge if the driver is mission-critical and the math works.
For owner-operators driving their own personal vehicle in a single-truck commercial setup, the same logic applies. If the owner has a recent DUI and tries to write commercial auto for their own work truck, expect specialty pricing or a clean-driver substitution requirement. We work through this regularly because the customer mix at our Stockton office includes both commercial-auto buyers and SR-22 buyers, and the conversation overlaps. If you've recently had a major violation and you're trying to keep a small business with a work truck running, call us — there's almost always a path, but it's a different policy than the clean-driver-Hartford lane.
Vehicle classes that need extra attention
Some California work-vehicle profiles have specific underwriting wrinkles that are worth knowing about before the quote conversation:
Pickup trucks with permanent equipment
A standard ½-ton or ¾-ton pickup with a contractor's tool box, ladder rack, and bed-mounted equipment is a normal commercial auto risk. A pickup that's been heavily modified — utility body, crane, lift gate, custom bed — moves into a different rate class. The carrier wants photos of the modifications and a description at quote. Don't omit modifications hoping for a lower rate; an undisclosed modification at claim time is a denial scenario.
Cargo vans and step vans
Cargo vans (Sprinter, Transit, ProMaster) used for delivery, mobile services, or contractor transport are bread-and-butter commercial auto. Step vans (Grumman-style walk-in vans) used for delivery routes are also standard, but the rate class and physical-damage cost are higher because the van values are higher. Hartford writes both. For step-van fleets above 5 units, Progressive Commercial often becomes more competitive.
SUVs and crossover vehicles used commercially
An SUV titled to a business and used for sales, real estate, or client transport is commercial auto, but it's rated more like a passenger auto with commercial use. These tend to price relatively low — often $1,400–$2,000/year for a single SUV — because the loss profile is closer to personal-auto than to truck-class.
Box trucks and Class 3–6 trucks
Box trucks and medium-duty trucks (24-foot box, refrigerated unit, lift gate) are commercial auto but verging on commercial truck territory. We split the conversation: if you have one or two used in local delivery, it stays in the commercial-auto policy with Hartford or Progressive. If you have a fleet of them or operate beyond a 200-mile radius, it shifts to a commercial truck program — see the commercial truck guide.
Food trucks and taco trucks
Taco trucks and food trucks are commercial auto plus a specialty food-business overlay (commissary requirements, propane, generator, food service liability). We write a meaningful number of these out of our Stockton and San Jose offices. See our food truck insurance California page and our taco truck insurance guide.
Vehicles with lender or lessor
If the vehicle has a lender (a loan) or is leased, the lender or lessor will be added as Loss Payee and as Additional Insured on the policy. They typically demand specific physical-damage coverage levels (often $0 deductible or $500 deductible, full coverage). Get the lender info to us up front so the policy is structured correctly the first time — re-issuing a dec page to add a Loss Payee is friction that's avoidable.
The claims process — what happens when a work truck is in an accident
The mechanics of a commercial auto claim are similar to personal auto, but with a few business-specific elements that owners should know in advance:
- Driver reports the accident — to the police if applicable, to the business owner, to the carrier (or to us, and we'll route). The carrier wants the report quickly; California's notice-of-loss timing is generally 30 days, but in practice you want the call within 24 hours.
- Carrier assigns an adjuster — typically within 24–48 hours for small commercial. The adjuster gathers the police report, statements, photos, MVR refresh, and medical reports if applicable.
- Liability determination — the carrier decides who's at fault based on the evidence. For business vehicles, this can include CDL-driver records and DOT logs if applicable. The claim path proceeds based on the determination.
- Settlement or litigation — most California small-business commercial auto claims settle without litigation. The carrier settles the third-party portion within the policy limit. The named insured business is kept informed but isn't the decision-maker on settlement.
- Subrogation, if applicable — if the at-fault party is someone else's commercial vehicle or someone else's personal auto, the carrier subrogates against that other carrier to recover what it paid. The named insured doesn't have to drive that recovery.
- Premium impact at renewal — at-fault commercial auto claims usually drive a renewal surcharge. Multiple claims in a single year can move the policy to a different carrier at renewal. This is one of the underlying reasons we recommend driver-training and MVR-checking practices for small-business commercial-auto buyers.
What slows down a claim or causes a denial: late reporting, undisclosed vehicle modifications, undisclosed drivers using the vehicle, business-class misdeclaration (a "private passenger" policy when the use is commercial), or undisclosed prior claims. Almost every claim denial we see in the small-commercial space traces back to a disclosure gap at the time of purchase. The right answer is honest underwriting up front; the savings from misdeclaring are illusory and they evaporate at the worst possible time.
Comparison: Hartford vs. Progressive Commercial vs. specialty markets
Three carriers handle most of our small-business commercial auto volume. Each has a clear lane.
| Carrier | Best fit | Typical relative pricing | Caveats |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Hartford | Standard-class small biz, 1–10 units, clean drivers, contractor / landscape / cleaner / professional services | Mid-market to slightly low-mid | Won't write OTR trucking, demolition, asbestos, towing, auto repair (pollution), tree service. Drivers with major violations move to other markets. |
| Progressive Commercial | Trucks, vans, mixed-class fleets, owner-operators, businesses with mid-range driver MVRs, food trucks, taco trucks | Mid-market; sometimes lower on physical damage | Strong on commercial truck programs — see our commercial truck guide. |
| Specialty markets (Bridger, Bluestar, etc.) | Higher-risk classes, tougher driver MVRs, prior-claim history, vehicles outside standard appetite | Higher than Hartford / Progressive | Slower turnaround (24–72h). Used when standard markets decline. |
The structural rule: a clean small-business commercial auto risk that fits Hartford's appetite gets the fastest turnaround and a competitive number from Hartford. A risk just outside Hartford's appetite — a slightly elevated MVR, an older driver-mix, a class that sits in Progressive's lane — moves to Progressive Commercial and we typically still close in 24–48 hours. Risks that decline at both move to specialty markets and the timeline stretches.
This is the broker-vs-direct-carrier value proposition: a commercial auto risk that doesn't fit the carrier the customer thinks of first (Geico Commercial, Progressive direct, etc.) doesn't have a dead-end. We have multiple markets and we route the risk to the one that actually wants to write it. For most standard small-biz placements, that's Hartford. For trucks and food-service vehicles, that's Progressive Commercial. For specialty, we have the markets in our broker book.
Choosing your liability limit — why $1M, $2M, or umbrella
The liability limit choice is one of the two highest-leverage decisions in a commercial auto policy (the other being driver eligibility). Three benchmarks I run through with every client:
$1,000,000 CSL — the small-business default. Covers the vast majority of single-claim scenarios for a small contractor, landscape company, cleaner, or local-delivery operator with a clean MVR and a single work truck. If the worst-case realistic claim is "rear-end somebody at a stoplight, soft-tissue injury, settle for $40,000–$120,000," then $1M is plenty. This is where most of our office's small-truck and single-van placements end up.
$2,000,000 CSL — the contract-driven upgrade. Triggered most often by a contract counterparty (a general contractor, a property management company, a hospital, a school district) demanding $2M as a minimum on the COI. Premium delta from $1M to $2M is typically 18–28% on the liability portion. For businesses that bid against contracts where $2M is the floor, this is just the cost of being eligible to bid.
$5M+ via umbrella over $1M auto + $1M GL — the multi-policy stack. Above $2M, primary commercial auto becomes expensive per dollar of coverage. The smarter structure for most small-to-mid businesses is to keep primary auto at $1M, keep primary GL at $1M, and stack a $5M umbrella over the entire liability stack. A $5M umbrella for a clean small business with one work truck and standard GL exposure is often $700–$1,400 per year. That's much cheaper per dollar than buying $5M of primary auto.
The umbrella conversation matters most for businesses with high-net-worth owners (the umbrella protects personal assets in a high-stakes lawsuit), businesses with employee drivers (an at-fault employee accident with multiple injured parties can exhaust primary fast), and businesses bidding contracts that require evidence of high total liability capacity.
One California-specific point: commercial auto liability limits matter more in California than in many other states because California's bodily-injury settlement values trend higher than the national median, and California's litigation environment can produce larger verdicts. The $1M default that's adequate in many states sometimes gets stretched in California. We talk about the umbrella stack explicitly in every commercial auto quote conversation as a result.
Frequently asked questions about California commercial auto
I'm keeping this FAQ block short because the bands and tables above answer most of the actual purchase decisions. Four questions that come up almost every quote:
Do I need commercial auto if I only use my personal truck for work occasionally?
If your vehicle is titled and used personally with only incidental work use, a personal auto policy with a business-use endorsement may suffice. The minute the vehicle is titled to a business, used to transport employees, used to make deliveries for hire, or carries tools/inventory as its primary function, you need commercial auto. Personal policies almost universally exclude commercial use, and a denied claim on a personal policy at claim time is the worst possible discovery.
How is commercial auto priced compared to personal auto?
Commercial auto is rated on vehicle class, garage location, radius of operation, gross vehicle weight, business class, driver records, and limit selection. A single work truck for a Stockton handyman might run $1,400–$2,200/year. The same truck registered to a fleet of 5 with employee drivers, operating in San Jose with broader radius, can run $2,200–$3,400/year. Commercial is generally 1.5–3x personal auto for an equivalent vehicle.
What is hired and non-owned auto liability?
Hired and non-owned auto (HNOA) covers business liability when an employee uses their personal car for company errands, or when the company rents a vehicle. It does not cover physical damage to the rented or borrowed vehicle — just the business's liability for damage caused. HNOA is a small, cheap endorsement that small-business owners with employees almost always want.
Does a CSLB-licensed contractor need commercial auto?
If the contractor uses any vehicle to transport tools, employees, or materials to a job site, the answer is functionally yes — even though commercial auto isn't strictly required by the CSLB. Many general-contractor prime agreements demand evidence of commercial auto in the COI alongside the GL. We pair Hartford GL and Hartford commercial auto for most California contractors writing through our office. See our CSLB contractor insurance guide for the full coverage stack contractors typically buy.
How long does it take to bind commercial auto with Via Rapida?
For a clean Hartford-appetite single-truck risk we typically bind same day if all the documents are in hand: vehicle VIN, registration, current declarations page (if there's an existing policy to replace), driver's license info for every driver, and business formation paperwork. For a 5–10 unit fleet expect same-day quote, next-day bind, with the COI delivered to any required certificate holders within hours of binding. Specialty placements take 24–72 hours.
Can I add or remove vehicles mid-policy?
Yes. Mid-term endorsements are routine — adding a newly purchased work truck, removing a sold or totaled vehicle, swapping a driver. Pro-rated premium adjustments apply. We process the endorsement and email the updated declarations page typically within the same business day.
Get a same-day quote for your work truck or fleet
Call 209-670-1556, walk into our Stockton, San Jose, or San Rafael office, or request a quote online. For 880-corridor fleets, declare radius honestly and we'll match you with the carrier that actually wants to write it. License #6003045. We don't charge broker fees on standard policies — most clients qualify. Bilingual service in English and Spanish; se habla español.
Pair the commercial auto with the rest of the small-business stack: general liability for small business, workers' comp under SB 216, fast COI generation, and landlord insurance if you also own the property the business runs out of.
Related Pages
General Liability Small Business →Commercial Truck California →Event Insurance California →Commercial vs Personal Business Use →Contractor Insurance & SB 216 →Trucking Insurance California Cost →Landlord Insurance →Fast COI Issuance →Business Insurance San Jose →