Residential Painting
Coverage built for interior and exterior painters working in homes, rental properties, and residential developments. Simple, fast, and built for how you actually work.
Yes โ and more homeowners and property managers are requiring proof of it before work starts. Even without a formal requirement, residential painting work carries real liability exposure. A ladder falls on a vehicle in the driveway, paint damages hardwood floors, a homeowner trips over your equipment โ these situations happen, and without insurance you're personally on the hook.
The foundation of residential painter coverage. Covers third-party bodily injury and property damage related to your work. If a homeowner's property is damaged during a job, or someone is injured in connection with your work, general liability responds to cover the legal costs and damages.
Your ladders, brushes, rollers, sprayers, and drop cloths go from job to job. Standard property insurance only covers items at a fixed location โ inland marine (tools and equipment) coverage follows your gear wherever it goes, including your truck and job sites.
This is included in your general liability policy and covers claims that arise after a job is finished. A homeowner notices paint peeling from improper prep or surface damage discovered after you've left โ completed operations coverage responds to these after-the-fact claims.
Many property management companies now require proof of general liability before approving a contractor to work in their properties. Typical requirements include a certificate of insurance showing at least $1M per occurrence, and the property manager or management company named as an additional insured.
Once you bind coverage with us, your COI is issued instantly and you can send it to any client or property manager right away.
Most solo residential painters pay between $400 and $900 per year for general liability. Adding tools and equipment coverage brings the total to $600โ$1,200 depending on your equipment value. Painters with employees or subcontractors pay more based on payroll and revenue.
Get your free quote
Our licensed agents build your custom quote โ typically same business day.
FAQ
You may not always be legally required to have it, but most property management companies require proof of GL before you can work in their properties. And even without a requirement, one claim from a homeowner can easily exceed a year's worth of premiums.
Those are separate issues from liability insurance. GL covers claims the homeowner makes against you โ not disputes about payment or damage to your gear by the homeowner. Tools coverage protects your equipment.
Yes โ we can issue certificates naming specific homeowners or property managers as additional insured. This is common for rental property work and some HOA-managed communities.
If you're being paid for painting work, you're operating a business in the eyes of an insurance carrier โ and you're exposed to claims. Coverage is typically affordable enough that it's worth having even for occasional paid work.
Same-day coverage is typically available. Fill out the quote form today and our agents will get you a quote quickly. Once you bind, your COI is issued instantly.
Licensed agents build your custom quote โ typically same business day. Review, enroll, and get your COI instantly.