Hot Shot Freight Insurance Limits: 6 Benchmarks (2026)

Hot shot freight insurance limits

6 hot shot freight insurance limit benchmarks for 2026—liability, cargo, physical damage, bobtail/NTL & more. Avoid load rejections—compare tiers.

Hot shot freight insurance limits usually need to match broker packets—not just “legal minimums”—and for many owner-operators that means starting around $1M auto liability and $100K motor truck cargo, then adjusting for your highest normal load value and equipment value. If your limits come up short, you can lose loads at onboarding or get stuck paying the gap after a claim.

This limit-focused guide complements our broader Hot shot insurance coverage checklist, so you can stop guessing and choose limits that brokers, shippers, and lenders actually expect.

Important: “Limits” = the maximum the insurer pays (per claim/per occurrence). Your deductible is what you pay first.

Typical hot shot insurance limits (quick reference)

Coverage Typical limit benchmark Why it matters
Primary auto liability $750K–$1M (brokers often want $1M) Gets you through onboarding + covers BI/PD to others
Motor truck cargo $50K–$250K (common: $100K) Matches your highest “normal” load value
Physical damage (comp/collision) Up to ACV / stated value of truck + trailer Protects your equipment + satisfies lienholders
Non-trucking (bobtail/NTL) Often $1M Covers you when you’re not under dispatch (situational)
General liability Common $1M / $2M Often required at job sites/facilities
Trailer value Scheduled to replacement value Your gooseneck/flatbed is a major asset

Key takeaways

Many freight brokers commonly require $1,000,000 in primary auto liability and often $100,000 in motor truck cargo coverage for hot shot carriers to pass onboarding and book brokered loads.

  • “Legal minimum” and “can you book loads” are not the same thing: broker requirements often drive your real-world limits.
  • Baseline tier (common): for many hot shot owner-ops, $1M auto liability + $100K cargo is the practical starting point—then you adjust for freight value and contracts.
  • Cargo limits aren’t everything: commodity acceptance and exclusions (theft, unattended vehicle, securement, etc.) can matter as much as the limit number.
  • Deductibles should be fundable fast: pick a deductible you can actually pay within 24–48 hours so a claim doesn’t shut you down.

Hot shot freight insurance limits by coverage (what to carry and why)

FMCSA’s financial responsibility minimum for many interstate for-hire non-hazardous property carriers is $750,000, but broker packets and shipper contracts frequently require higher limits like $1,000,000 for primary auto liability.

Below are the limit benchmarks that show up most in broker packets, shipper requirements, and real-world claims.

Primary auto liability (the “gatekeeper” limit)

Primary auto liability pays for bodily injury and property damage you cause to others in an at-fault crash, and it does not pay for your cargo or your truck.

This is usually the first line a broker checks on your COI. If you’re short, you often don’t get the load.

  • $750K: a common “floor” discussed for certain operations, but not where many brokers set the bar.
  • $1,000,000 ($1M): the most common practical requirement for brokered freight and many shipper facilities.

When $1M is effectively mandatory:

  • You’re booking through larger brokerages with standardized onboarding.
  • You run busier metro lanes with higher third-party exposure.
  • Your shippers want “set it and forget it” compliance and won’t make exceptions.

Reference: FMCSA insurance filing requirements and financial responsibility rules vary by operation and commodity; verify your exact requirement for your authority and freight type. Source: https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/registration/insurance-filing-requirements

Motor truck cargo (the “one bad load can wipe you out” limit)

Motor truck cargo insurance pays for damage to or loss of freight you’re legally responsible for up to your policy limit, subject to exclusions and conditions.

Cargo is where hot shot operators get ambushed: the broker tenders a load at $92,000, you carry $50,000 cargo, and now you’re either not getting the load or gambling your business on a limit gap.

Typical cargo limit tiers:

  • $50,000: can work for lower-value general freight, but may restrict broker options.
  • $100,000: a common baseline for many hot shot operations.
  • $250,000: shows up for higher-value equipment, certain broker programs, or when you move into a better-paying niche.

For deeper cargo specifics (including common exclusions that can kill claims), see Motor truck cargo insurance details.

Pro tip (simple formula): Set cargo to cover your highest “normal” load value, not the once-a-year unicorn. If you regularly see $130K loads, $100K cargo isn’t “close enough.”

Physical damage (your truck and trailer are your livelihood)

Physical damage coverage typically includes comprehensive and collision for your equipment, and the “limit” is tied to the scheduled value (often ACV or stated value) of your truck and trailer.

If your truck is down, your revenue is down. Even a “minor” hit can turn into towing and storage, parts delays, missed reloads, and lost broker relationships.

  • Insure your truck at a realistic ACV / stated value that matches replacement reality.
  • Schedule your trailer to its replacement value (a gooseneck/flatbed isn’t a cheap accessory).

If you want the nuts-and-bolts on comp/collision limits, valuations, and deductibles, read Physical damage insurance for your truck/trailer.

Deductible strategy that won’t bankrupt you: pick a deductible you can fund fast. A $5,000 deductible doesn’t “save money” if you only keep $1,200 in your business account.

Non-trucking liability (bobtail/NTL) (common, but often misunderstood)

Non-trucking liability (bobtail/NTL) can apply when you’re not under dispatch and using the truck for non-business purposes, depending on policy wording and your lease/dispatch setup.

Gaps happen when one policy denies because you weren’t under dispatch and another denies because you were still in business use. That’s why the definitions and the paperwork matter.

  • Common limit benchmark: often written at $1M (program-dependent).

For a deeper walkthrough of when it applies, see Non-trucking liability (bobtail) insurance explainer.

General liability (GL) (separate from auto liability)

General liability (GL) covers many “premises/operations” claims (like slip-and-fall allegations) that happen because of your business operations rather than driving.

Many job sites and facilities—especially construction and industrial deliveries—want GL on file even if you already have auto liability.

  • Common benchmark: $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate (varies by contract).

How to choose the right limits (and what happens to your premium)

Hot shot insurance limits should be chosen in this order: (1) broker/shipper contract requirements, (2) your highest normal load value, and (3) your truck/trailer replacement values.

Limits should be driven by a simple, business-first decision chain:

  1. Your contracts: broker/shipper onboarding packet and rate confirmation requirements
  2. Your max normal load value: cargo exposure you see regularly
  3. Your asset values: truck/trailer replacement cost + downtime reality

The 3 “limit rules” that keep you profitable

Rule #1: The law is the floor—your brokers are the ceiling

Even when a lower threshold might meet a legal minimum in some scenarios, brokers can still require higher limits to tender loads, and they can deny onboarding if you don’t meet their COI checklist.

Rule #2: Buy limits to avoid scrambling on a Friday afternoon

If your best broker requires $1M liability and $100K cargo, but you’re sitting at $750K / $50K, you’ll often end up begging for exceptions (rare), rushing endorsements (slow), or missing the load (common).

Rule #3: Downtime is an uninsured cost—price limits with downtime in mind

Insurance usually doesn’t pay for your reputation, your missed reloads, or the time you lose chasing paperwork, so your true loss includes downtime and lost momentum.

“How much will higher limits cost me?” (realistic expectations)

Premium depends on factors like new authority vs. established history, radius, commodity, loss runs, MVRs, garaging ZIP, and where you park at night.

  • Liability increases can move premium noticeably, especially for newer ventures.
  • Cargo increases often move in tiers (a $100K → $250K jump is commonly the one you feel).
  • Physical damage tracks closely with equipment value and deductible choices.

For budgeting context and typical monthly ranges, see Hot shot insurance monthly cost breakdown.

Industry cost context: ATRI’s Operational Costs of Trucking reports consistently list insurance as a major operating-cost category for carriers. Source: https://truckingresearch.org/2025/10/operational-costs-of-trucking/

Example tier map (not a quote—use it to think clearly)

Tier Who it fits Liability Cargo Notes
Starter (restricted access) Low-value freight, limited broker network $750K $50K May limit onboarding options
“Most common” working tier General freight hot shot $1M $100K Matches many broker packets
Higher-value freight tier Equipment/materials with higher load values $1M $250K Often needed for better-paying niches

Intrastate-only hot shot (quick reality check)

Intrastate operations can have state-specific minimums and filings, but brokers can still require $1M liability and $100K+ cargo regardless of what a state minimum allows.

Example resource (Texas): https://www.txdmv.gov/motor-carriers/insurance-requirements

Limit-selection checklist (use this before you bind)

  • Pull COI requirements from your top 3 brokers/shippers.
  • Write down your highest normal load value (don’t guess).
  • Confirm cargo commodity acceptance and key exclusions (theft, unattended vehicle, improper securement, temperature, etc.).
  • Verify truck + trailer values and pick deductibles you can pay quickly.
  • Make sure you understand when you’re considered under dispatch vs. not.

Frequently Asked Questions

Most commonly, hot shot trucking brokers require $1,000,000 in primary auto liability and a stated cargo limit that’s often $100,000, because those numbers align with many standardized onboarding packets for brokered freight. Some broker or facility programs also require general liability, commonly $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate, plus specific COI wording. The only reliable answer is your broker packet and rate confirmation requirements, because limits can change by commodity, facility rules, and customer contract terms.

Often, yes in practice, because many brokers won’t tender loads unless your COI shows $1,000,000 in primary auto liability. FMCSA financial responsibility minimums for many interstate for-hire non-hazardous property carriers are commonly cited at $750,000, but “legal minimum” doesn’t guarantee you’ll pass broker onboarding. To confirm the federal filing/financial responsibility rules that apply to your operation and commodity, use FMCSA’s resource: https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/registration/insurance-filing-requirements.

$100,000 in motor truck cargo coverage is a common starting point for many hot shot operations, because it fits a wide range of general freight and meets many broker program minimums. $50,000 cargo can work for lower-value lanes but may restrict broker access, while $250,000 is common when you regularly haul higher-value equipment or join programs that require higher limits. The best rule is to match cargo to your highest normal load value and confirm commodity acceptance and exclusions before binding.

Many hot shot operators do need non-trucking (bobtail/NTL) liability, especially in leased-on or mixed-use setups, because it can apply when you’re not under dispatch depending on policy wording and your contract. A common benchmark limit is often $1,000,000, but the real decision is about avoiding coverage gaps caused by conflicting “under dispatch” definitions. If you’re unsure how your setup is treated, start with Non-trucking liability (bobtail) insurance explainer and compare it to your lease/dispatch agreement.

Conclusion: Pick limits that match your loads (and your brokers)

Hot shot freight insurance limits aren’t about “what’s cheapest”—they’re about what keeps you working and what keeps one claim from turning into a business-ending bill. For many operators, a practical baseline is $1M liability and $100K cargo, then you adjust based on your lanes, load values, and broker packets.

Key Takeaways:

  • Use broker/shipper packets as your limits “scorecard,” not state minimums alone.
  • Match cargo to your highest normal load value, and verify exclusions and commodity acceptance.
  • Insure truck/trailer at realistic values and choose deductibles you can fund quickly.

If you want to lower premium after you’re correctly insured, focus on smart levers like deductible planning, safety controls, and commodity/radius fit—not underinsuring.

Related reading

Logrock publishes plain-English guidance built for owner-operators who care about cash flow, compliance, and staying on the road. If you’re tired of guessing your limits, compare tiers and match coverage to your broker packets before the next load offer hits.

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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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