Combined single limit truck insurance explained: CSL vs split limits, FMCSA minimums, MCS-90 basics, and broker $1M rules. Get quotes.
Combined single limit truck insurance (CSL) means your auto liability has one shared dollar limit per accident to pay bodily injury + property damage claims—rather than separate “buckets.” In practice, you’ll commonly see $750,000, $1,000,000, $2,000,000, or $5,000,000 CSL depending on your operation, contracts, and FMCSA financial responsibility rules.
Most owner-operators don’t get hurt because they skipped insurance—they get hurt because the limit structure (CSL vs split limits) and the limit amount don’t match their exposure, or their COI doesn’t match what the broker asked for. If you want the bigger picture of what’s usually inside a policy, start with commercial truck insurance coverage basics.
Key takeaways
Combined single limit (CSL) is a liability limit format where one per-accident number (like $1,000,000) applies to both bodily injury and property damage, subject to the policy terms.
- CSL = one pool of money per accident for third-party liability (injury + property damage).
- FMCSA minimums are often lower than broker requirements—$1M CSL is common in contracts even when $750K may be legal for some operations.
- MCS-90 is not “full coverage.” It’s a federal endorsement designed to protect the public, and reimbursement can apply in certain situations.
- Premium is driven more by risk + limit amount than CSL vs split, so compare real quotes at $750K, $1M, $2M+.
Hero image placeholder: Truck + insurance paperwork
Table of Contents
Reading time: 8 minutes
- What is combined single limit (CSL) truck insurance?
- CSL vs split limits (with trucking examples)
- What does “$1,000,000 CSL” mean on your truck insurance policy?
- FMCSA minimum liability limits (CSL) for trucks in 2026
- MCS-90 endorsement: how it relates to CSL (and what it doesn’t do)
- Why brokers and shippers often require $1M CSL (even if FMCSA minimums are lower)
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Conclusion: Pick a CSL limit you can live with
What is combined single limit (CSL) truck insurance?
Combined single limit (CSL) truck insurance is a commercial auto liability limit format where one per-accident dollar amount pays for bodily injury and property damage to others, such as $1,000,000 CSL for a single covered accident.
What it is (plain English)
CSL is simply how the liability limit is expressed on your commercial auto policy. Instead of separate caps for bodily injury and property damage, you get one combined number per accident—like $1,000,000 CSL.
In trucking, CSL most commonly shows up on your primary auto liability—the coverage that pays other people when you’re at fault. For a deeper breakdown of what “primary” means in trucking, see primary liability coverage for trucking explained.
Why it’s essential (money + contracts)
- Real claims don’t stay in neat categories: One accident can be “mostly property damage” (guardrail, bridge, multiple cars) or “mostly injury.” CSL lets the claim be paid from one pool up to the single cap.
- Brokers like CSL because it’s easy to verify on a COI: Less back-and-forth, fewer onboarding delays, fewer missed loads.
Who usually needs CSL
- Owner-operators with authority (especially interstate)
- Small fleets
- Hotshot operators running under dispatch/broker contracts (you’ll see $1M CSL requirements often)
What CSL does not cover
CSL is liability to others. It does not replace coverage types like physical damage (your truck), cargo coverage (the freight), or non-trucking liability/bobtail (if you’re leased-on—depends on your setup and the motor carrier agreement).
CSL vs split limits (with trucking examples)
CSL uses one per-accident limit (like $1,000,000) while split limits use separate caps (like 100/300/100) that can restrict how much is paid for property damage versus injuries.
Split limits vs CSL (side-by-side)
Split limits can look like 100/300/100, meaning:
- $100,000 bodily injury per person
- $300,000 bodily injury per accident
- $100,000 property damage per accident
CSL looks like:
- $1,000,000 CSL (one combined limit shared across BI + PD per accident)
Graphic placeholder: CSL vs split limits comparison
| Limit structure | How it pays | Best for | Common trucking use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Split limits (e.g., 100/300/100) | Separate caps for BI and PD | Some smaller risks and certain local operations | Less common for for-hire trucking |
| CSL (e.g., $1M CSL) | One pool for BI + PD | Mixed/severe losses and contract compliance | Very common for semi truck insurance |
Example #1: “Mostly property damage” loss
You clip a passenger vehicle and take out 200 feet of guardrail. Injuries are minor, but the repair bill is big.
- Split limits: Can get jammed up if PD caps at $100K even when BI is unused.
- CSL: Can apply more of the total limit to PD (still capped by the CSL amount).
Example #2: Multi-vehicle chain reaction
You get caught in stop-and-go traffic, and it turns into a chain reaction with multiple injured occupants.
- Split limits: Can hit per-person caps fast.
- CSL: Still has an overall ceiling, but avoids the PD “bucket” constraint.
Pro tip (avoid wasted quoting time)
When you ask for quotes, don’t stop at “CSL or split?” Ask for limit options: $750K vs $1M vs $2M. The limit amount is where the real decision is made.
What does “$1,000,000 CSL” mean on your truck insurance policy?
$1,000,000 CSL typically means the insurer’s maximum payment for covered third-party liability from one accident is $1,000,000 total for bodily injury and property damage combined, subject to the policy terms and conditions.
Two details that matter in the real world
- “Per accident” is the key phrase: CSL is usually not a per-person cap structure like split limits.
- Defense costs can be inside or outside the limit: That depends on the policy form, state rules, and endorsements—your declarations page and forms tell the truth.
If you’re not 100% sure what your dec page is showing, use this walkthrough: how to read a truck insurance declarations page.
Why this protects your cash flow
A single serious crash can turn into ambulance and ER bills, surgeries, lost wages, attorney involvement, and major property damage (cars, buildings, infrastructure). If your limit is too low, you’re not only risking a lawsuit—you’re risking business continuity.
FMCSA minimum liability limits (CSL) for trucks in 2026
FMCSA’s federal minimum public liability requirements in 49 CFR Part 387 are commonly referenced as $750,000, $1,000,000, and $5,000,000 combined single limits depending on the operation and the commodity hauled.
Here are the official references most people check:
- FMCSA overview: https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/registration/insurance-filing-requirements
- Regulation text (49 CFR Part 387): https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-49/subtitle-B/chapter-III/subchapter-B/part-387
To understand what “proof of insurance” looks like in practice (and what gets filed), see FMCSA insurance filings (BMC-91/91X, BMC-34).
Regulatory table placeholder: Verify limits and commodity definitions in the eCFR before publish
FMCSA minimum public liability limits (simplified)
| Operation / commodity (simplified) | Minimum limit (CSL) | Common real-world requirement | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| For-hire general freight (non-hazardous) | $750,000 | $1,000,000 CSL | Many brokers won’t load you at $750K even if it’s legal. |
| Oil and certain hazardous substances | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000–$2,000,000 | Commodity definitions matter; confirm with your agent and shipper contract. |
| Placardable hazmat / certain hazardous waste | $5,000,000 | $5,000,000+ | High-severity exposure; contracts may add more requirements. |
Note: Federal rules are the baseline for certain for-hire interstate operations; intrastate requirements can differ by state, and broker/shipper contracts can be stricter than the legal minimum.
MCS-90 endorsement: how it relates to CSL (and what it doesn’t do)
The MCS-90 endorsement is a federal endorsement in 49 CFR 387.15 that can attach to certain motor carrier policies as part of meeting public liability financial responsibility requirements, but it is not the same thing as “full coverage.”
If you want the full breakdown with real-world “what happens after a claim,” see MCS-90 endorsement for motor carriers.
What it is (straight version)
MCS-90 is designed to protect the public by ensuring there’s a mechanism to pay certain liability claims tied to motor carrier operations, even when a policy exclusion might otherwise block coverage in specific circumstances. Official form language: https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-49/subtitle-B/chapter-III/subchapter-B/part-387/section-387.15
Common misunderstandings (where people get burned)
- MCS-90 is not cargo insurance: It doesn’t pay for the shipper’s freight.
- MCS-90 is not physical damage: It doesn’t fix your truck.
- MCS-90 does not mean “covered no matter what”: It’s not a substitute for a clean coverage package.
- Reimbursement risk exists: In some situations, after an MCS-90 payment, the insurer may seek reimbursement from the insured motor carrier (get advice for your exact facts).
If you’re buying CSL to satisfy a contract, treat MCS-90 as compliance-related, not a replacement for the right coverages.
Why brokers and shippers often require $1M CSL (even if FMCSA minimums are lower)
Many freight broker and shipper contracts require $1,000,000 CSL because it’s easy to verify on a COI and provides more protection than low split limits in high-severity trucking losses.
What it is (contract reality)
A lot of freight moves under a simple standard: $1,000,000 CSL auto liability. It has become a common “entry ticket” in for-hire freight because it’s:
- easy to read on a COI
- easy to compare across carriers
- more flexible in mixed BI/PD losses than many split-limit structures
What else they’ll ask for (don’t mix this up)
Brokers often bundle CSL requirements with other insurance requirements, and the big one people confuse is cargo. If you’re not crystal-clear on the difference between liability (hurting others) and cargo (damaging freight), start here: cargo insurance vs. liability (don’t mix these up).
You may also see requirements like additional insured wording, waiver of subrogation, primary/noncontributory language, or higher limits for specific commodities and lanes.
Who should pay extra attention
- New authorities trying to get set up with brokers quickly
- Hotshot operators hauling higher-value loads where contracts get strict fast
- Anyone running high-traffic corridors where PD + BI severity is real
Frequently Asked Questions
CSL questions usually come down to three things: the per-accident limit amount (like $1,000,000), what the policy actually covers on the dec page, and what FMCSA or broker contracts require for your operation.
Next steps: pick a CSL limit you can live with (and keep loads moving)
The fastest way to choose the right CSL limit is to start with your contracts (often $1M CSL), then match limits to exposure, and then control premium using underwriting-friendly risk improvements.
- Start with contracts: If your brokers require $1M CSL, price around that first.
- Match the limit to exposure: Dense metro lanes, high PD corridors, and higher-severity operations justify higher limits.
- Control premium the smart way: Safety tech, clean MVRs, a tight radius when possible, and consistent underwriting data help.
If you’re trying to keep this affordable without cutting corners, use affordable trucking insurance tips (without cutting corners).
If you run hotshot and keep seeing “$1M CSL required” on rate cons, start with hotshot insurance requirements and coverages.
Practical move: Get quotes at $750K, $1M, and $2M CSL side-by-side so you can decide with real numbers—not guesses.
Conclusion: Pick a CSL limit you can live with
Combined single limit (CSL) liability uses one per-accident limit (like $1,000,000) to pay bodily injury and property damage to others, and it’s the format brokers most often want on a COI.
If you’re aiming to keep loads moving, focus on (1) what your contracts require, (2) what FMCSA requires for your operation, and (3) what limit amount you can afford if the worst day shows up.
Key Takeaways:
- CSL simplifies claims: One pool of money per accident for BI + PD (subject to policy terms).
- Contracts usually set the bar: $1M CSL is a common broker minimum even when $750K may be legal for some carriers.
- Quote multiple limits: Compare $750K vs $1M vs $2M to see the real premium difference for your risk profile.
Reminder: This article is educational; your exact requirements depend on your operation, filings, and contracts. Verify limits and categories in the eCFR and with a licensed insurance professional.