1–5 Truck Fleet Insurance: 2026 Costs ($750–$2.5K/mo)

Small fleet insurance for 1-5 trucks

Small fleet insurance for 1–5 trucks often runs $750–$2,500+/mo per truck. Compare coverages, requirements, and savings—get quotes.

If you’re running 1–5 trucks, small fleet insurance for 1–5 trucks isn’t a “fixed cost”—it’s a cash-flow test that can swing your cost-per-mile fast. Most small fleets see commercial truck insurance land around $750 to $2,500+ per month per truck, depending on state, new venture status, operating radius, cargo, limits/deductibles, driver quality, and loss history.

This guide is the practical, micro-fleet version of our broader commercial truck fleet insurance guide—so you can price your operation correctly, pick coverages that match your contracts, and stop overpaying.

Key takeaways (save this before you quote)

For many 1–5 truck operations, per-truck premiums commonly fall between $750 and $2,500+ per month per truck, with new authority and long-haul operations trending higher.

  • Expect $750–$2,500+/mo per truck: New authority + long-haul + inexperienced drivers often push you to the high end.
  • Your “submission packet” matters: Clean driver info, accurate radius/cargo, and loss runs can change what markets will quote.
  • Coverage choices are business choices: Higher deductibles can cut premium, but only if you have cash reserves for claims and downtime.
  • Telematics + coaching: Cameras help, but documented coaching and improvement trends are what move renewal terms.

What counts as a small fleet (and why 1–5 trucks price differently)

A “small fleet” typically means operating under one business entity/authority with 1–5 power units, and some carriers begin “fleet” rating at 3+ units (definitions vary by market).

What it is (plain English)

Many 1–2 truck operations are still treated like owner-operator accounts, even if you’re building a company and hiring drivers. That matters because the underwriter is pricing the whole story: your drivers, lanes, cargo, procedures, and how fast you’re growing.

If you need a quick reset on terminology (liability vs cargo vs physical damage vs bobtail), start with this commercial truck insurance basics explainer.

Why it’s essential (the business angle)

Micro-fleets can be harder to place than larger fleets because a single claim can distort your loss picture fast, and growth often happens faster than your safety process can keep up.

  • Less historical data: Fewer months/years of results to prove predictable losses.
  • Claim impact is amplified: One loss affects a larger share of your book.
  • Scaling risk: Adding drivers, lanes, and cargo types changes the underwriting profile quickly.

Who needs it

  • Owner-operators adding a second/third truck (and hiring a driver)
  • New authorities trying to scale past “one truck revenue”
  • Hotshot operators growing into multiple units (hotshot insurance still gets underwritten on the same fundamentals: drivers, radius, cargo, loss history)

Pro tip: If you’re adding trucks, standardize how you name vehicles/drivers and request COIs. Admin sloppiness costs time—and time costs loads.

Small fleet insurance cost (1–5 trucks): monthly + annual examples

Small fleet trucking insurance for 1–5 trucks commonly prices in a wide range of $750–$2,500+ per month per truck (about $9,000–$30,000+ per year per truck) depending on risk factors and coverage choices.

What it is (the reality check)

“Truck count” isn’t usually the main driver. Underwriters price the risk profile: who’s driving, where you run, what you haul, how you maintain, and what your losses look like.

For a deeper breakdown of rating variables (drivers, garaging, radius, cargo, limits, and losses), see what affects the cost of truck insurance.

Why it’s essential (cash-flow planning)

Insurance is consistently a major operating cost line item for motor carriers, so small premium changes can materially affect cost-per-mile and survival during slow freight cycles (source: ATRI Operational Costs of Trucking, https://truckingresearch.org/operational-costs-of-trucking/).

1-to-5 truck scaling chart (example)

This is a simplified range view to help you budget; real quotes can fall outside these bands based on your state, authority age, commodity, and loss history.

Fleet size Example per-truck monthly range Example total monthly range
1 truck $900–$2,800 $900–$2,800
2 trucks $850–$2,650 $1,700–$5,300
3 trucks $800–$2,500 $2,400–$7,500
4 trucks $775–$2,450 $3,100–$9,800
5 trucks $750–$2,400 $3,750–$12,000

What to notice: Per-truck cost can ease as you add units, but if you grow fast (new drivers, new lanes, new cargo), it can just as easily go the other direction.

Three scenarios to help you self-identify

  1. New venture (0–12 months authority), regional dry van, financed equipment: Often higher due to limited operating history plus lender physical damage requirements.
  2. Established authority, local/regional radius, paid-off equipment: Can be meaningfully lower if drivers are clean and losses are controlled.
  3. Higher-risk cargo or broader radius + higher limits: Costs climb because contracts and exposure climb.

Coverages a 1–5 truck fleet typically needs (and what each does)

A 1–5 truck fleet insurance program typically includes auto liability plus optional layers like cargo, physical damage, general liability, and trailer interchange based on contracts, equipment financing, and how you operate.

What it is (coverage stack in plain English)

Most micro-fleet policies are built from a few core layers. The “right” stack depends on how you run, what you haul, and what your shipper/broker/lender paperwork requires.

Coverage What it does Who requires it Cost impact (typical)
Auto liability Pays for injuries/property damage you cause Legal + brokers/shippers High
Motor truck cargo Covers customer freight you’re responsible for Brokers/shippers Medium
Physical damage Covers your truck (comp/collision) Lenders/lessors (usually) Medium–High
General liability Covers non-auto business liability (slip/fall, etc.) Many shipper/broker contracts Low–Medium
Trailer interchange Covers non-owned trailers in your care If you pull other people’s trailers Low–Medium
Non-trucking liability / bobtail Limited coverage off-dispatch (varies) Often for leased-on situations Low
HNOA Liability if employees use personal/rented autos for business If you have staff running errands/rent cars Low

Why it’s essential (don’t buy gaps)

The fastest way to go broke isn’t paying a high premium—it’s having the wrong coverage when a claim hits and learning your contract required something you didn’t carry.

Your DOT/safety profile also matters because insurers connect compliance and safety trends to claim frequency and severity; see DOT record and trucking insurance.

Who needs this section most

  • Anyone adding a second driver (your exposure changes overnight)
  • Anyone signing broker/shipper contracts (requirements often exceed legal minimums)
  • Anyone financing equipment (physical damage terms are usually non-negotiable)

Pro tip: Don’t pick deductibles by “what feels cheaper.” Pick them based on cash reserves + downtime reality. If you can’t comfortably write the check after a claim, that deductible is a trap.

How to lower premiums (and buy/renew like a pro in 2026)

Small fleets can often reduce insurance costs by quoting early (45–60 days), tightening driver standards, aligning radius/commodity reporting, and documenting telematics-driven coaching before renewal.

For the expanded playbook on affordable trucking insurance, use this savings guide.

7 tactics that actually move pricing

  1. Re-quote early (45–60 days before renewal): Waiting until the last two weeks kills leverage and market options.
  2. Right-size your radius and lanes: Don’t rate yourself for 500 miles if you run 150. Don’t understate either—misrepresentation can create claim problems.
  3. Control driver quality (written minimums): Set minimum experience, hiring rules, and a probation period. One bad driver can price the whole fleet.
  4. Stop “nuisance claims” when you can: Small physical damage claims can follow you at renewal. Build a reserve if possible.
  5. Clean up loss runs: Confirm closed claims, correct inaccuracies, and document corrective actions (training, maintenance changes).
  6. Telematics with coaching (not just hardware): Dash cams + driver scorecards + weekly coaching notes = proof you manage risk.
  7. Avoid lapses and manage payments: Lapses crush insurability. Protect the policy first.

Telematics ROI plan (simple and workable)

  • Start with: forward-facing cameras + basic telematics (speeding, harsh braking, hard turns, distracted driving flags)
  • Run a weekly rhythm: 15-minute coaching per driver + documented follow-up
  • Bring proof to renewal: a 60–90 day trend report + your coaching log

Underwriters don’t discount “devices.” They reward measurable behavior change.

Step-by-step: how to buy/renew without getting squeezed

60 days out

  • Build a one-page submission: units, garaging, radius, commodities, limits, deductibles
  • Driver roster with experience notes
  • Loss runs + prior carrier info

45 days out

  • Start quoting and demand apples-to-apples terms (same limits/deductibles/forms)
  • Ask about exclusions (cargo restrictions are common)

30 days out

  • Negotiate the levers that matter: deductibles, radius, driver changes, safety plan evidence

14 days out

  • Finalize COIs and endorsements for brokers/shippers/lenders so you don’t miss load opportunities

Frequently Asked Questions

Small fleet insurance questions usually come down to per-truck monthly cost, what “fleet” means to a carrier, and which coverages are required by law versus required by contracts.

Insurance for a 1–5 truck fleet often benchmarks around $750–$2,500+ per month per truck, but your real number depends on state, authority age, operating radius, cargo, limits, deductibles, driver MVR/experience, and loss history. New ventures (first 0–12 months) and long-haul lanes tend to price higher because underwriters have less operating history to lean on. To compare quotes correctly, keep limits and deductibles the same across markets and confirm you’re being rated for the radius you actually run (not 500 miles if you run 150). When in doubt, ask for the exact rating assumptions in writing.

Yes, 3 trucks is often treated as “fleet” by many commercial trucking insurance markets, but the cutoff isn’t universal and can vary by carrier and program. Some insurers rate “fleet” at 3+ power units, while others still treat 3 trucks as a micro-fleet if it’s a new venture, you’re adding new drivers quickly, or your loss history is thin. In practical terms, what changes is the pricing method and which markets will quote—not the need to provide clean driver data, accurate garaging, and consistent radius/commodity details. If you’re right at 3 units, ask whether you’ll be rated as fleet or non-fleet and why.

At minimum, for-hire interstate carriers hauling non-hazardous general freight typically must maintain $750,000 in public liability financial responsibility under FMCSA rules (49 CFR 387.9), and some operations require higher limits for certain hazardous materials. Separately, many brokers and shippers require $1,000,000 auto liability plus cargo and sometimes general liability as a contract condition (even if the legal minimum is lower). Lenders and lessors usually require physical damage on financed equipment, and trailer interchange applies when you pull non-owned trailers. The “required” coverages are often driven by contracts as much as regulations.

New venture (new authority) fleets usually cost more because insurers have limited operating history to evaluate, so they price for uncertainty until you build a measurable safety and loss record. The fastest ways to reduce that penalty are using experienced drivers, avoiding coverage lapses, keeping radius and commodity reporting consistent, and documenting safety controls (maintenance routines, training, and telematics coaching). The setup stage also matters because authority and insurance timing can create expensive last-minute filings and rushed choices; see how to prepare for the FMCSA authority application. If you can run clean for 6–12 months, renewal options often improve.

Conclusion: Price your 1–5 truck fleet correctly (and avoid gaps)

Running a 1–5 truck operation is all about controlling what you can: clean driver hiring, accurate radius/cargo reporting, and a submission that underwriters can trust. That’s how you get better trucking insurance terms—and keep them.

Key Takeaways:

  • Budget realistically: $750–$2,500+ per month per truck is a common range, and new ventures/long-haul can exceed it.
  • Quote early: Start 45–60 days before renewal to keep markets and leverage.
  • Buy for contracts, not guesses: Verify limits, endorsements, and forms (not just the monthly payment).

If you want to stop guessing, build your packet, quote early, and compare coverage forms—not just price. One missing endorsement can cost you a load, and one coverage gap can cost you the business.

Related reading

Brand value (why Logrock)

Logrock focuses on practical commercial trucking realities—tight margins, broker requirements, lender rules, and compliance pressure—so you can buy commercial truck insurance that matches how you actually run, not how a generic form assumes you run.

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Written by

Daniel Summers
daniel@logrock.com
My goal is simple: help people start trucking companies and keep them rolling. With years of experience in the transportation industry, I chose to specialize in commercial trucking insurance, a niche I know inside and out. From helping new owner-operators get the right coverage to supporting established fleets with their insurance needs, this work is my comfort zone: demanding, fast-paced, and never boring, exactly what keeps me passionate about serving the commercial trucking community.
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Posted by

Daniel Summers
My goal is simple: help people start trucking companies and keep them rolling. With years of experience in the transportation industry, I chose to specialize in commercial trucking insurance, a niche I know inside and out. From helping new owner-operators get the right coverage to supporting established fleets with their insurance needs, this work is my comfort zone: demanding, fast-paced, and never boring, exactly what keeps me passionate about serving the commercial trucking community.

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