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 come down to what brokers and shippers will accept—most commonly $1M auto liability and $100K cargo—not just the “legal minimum.” If your limits don’t match the broker packet, you can lose the load before you ever get dispatched.
This guide is a limit-focused companion to our broader hot shot insurance coverage checklist, so you can match the limits that show up in onboarding packets, rate confirmations, and equipment finance requirements.
Important: “Limits” = the maximum the insurer will pay (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 |
Table of Contents
Reading time: 9 minutes
Key Takeaways
Broker onboarding packets commonly require $1,000,000 in primary auto liability and $100,000 in cargo, even when a lower “legal minimum” might apply to a specific operation.
- “Legal minimum” and “can you book loads” aren’t the same thing: broker requirements usually drive your real-world limits.
- A practical starting tier for many hot shot owner-ops: $1M auto liability + $100K cargo, then adjust based on freight value and contracts.
- Cargo limits can be misleading: exclusions and commodity acceptance can matter as much as the number.
- Deductibles need to be fundable fast: choose a deductible you can pay within 24–48 hours without shutting down.
Hot Shot Freight Insurance Limits by Coverage (What to Carry and Why)
Hot shot freight insurance limits are typically set by a mix of FMCSA financial responsibility rules, broker/shipper COI requirements, and your load and equipment values.
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 accident, and it does not pay for your cargo or your truck.
This is the first line item most brokers check on your certificate of insurance (COI). If you’re short, you usually don’t get onboarded.
Benchmarks you’ll see:
- $750,000: a common “floor” discussed in the industry 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 (more third-party exposure).
- Your shippers want “set it and forget it” compliance (they 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: FMCSA Insurance Filing Requirements.
Motor Truck Cargo (the “one bad load can wipe you out” limit)
Motor truck cargo insurance generally pays for loss of or damage to freight you’re legally liable for, up to the stated limit, and subject to exclusions and conditions.
Cargo is where hot shot operators get ambushed: if the broker tenders a $92,000 load and you carry $50,000 cargo, you’re either not getting the load—or you’re gambling your business on the gap.
Typical cargo limit tiers:
- $50,000: can work for lower-value general freight, but may restrict broker options.
- $100,000: the most common baseline for many hot shot operations.
- $250,000: common for higher-value equipment, certain broker programs, or when you move into a better-paying niche.
For cargo-specific details (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 is not “close enough.”
Physical Damage (your truck and trailer are your livelihood)
Physical damage coverage is comprehensive and collision for your truck (and often your trailer), and the effective “limit” is the scheduled value or actual cash value (ACV) of each unit.
If your truck is down, your revenue is down. Even a “minor” hit can spiral into towing, storage, parts delays, missed reloads, and damaged broker relationships.
- Truck value: insure at a realistic ACV / stated value that matches replacement reality.
- Trailer value: schedule to replacement value (a gooseneck/flatbed isn’t a cheap accessory).
If you want the nuts-and-bolts on valuations and deductibles, read physical damage insurance for your truck/trailer.
Deductible strategy that won’t bankrupt you: if you choose a $5,000 deductible to save premium but only keep $1,200 available, you didn’t save money—you created a shutdown risk.
Non-Trucking Liability (Bobtail/NTL) (common, but often misunderstood)
Non-trucking liability (often called 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.
The real risk is a gap where the primary liability says “not covered because you weren’t under dispatch” and another policy says “not covered because you were still in business use.”
Common limit benchmark:
- Often written at $1M (program-dependent).
Deeper explanation and when it actually applies: non-trucking liability (bobtail) insurance explainer.
General Liability (GL) (separate from auto liability)
General liability insurance covers premises and operations claims (like third-party injury or property damage) that are related to your business operations rather than vehicle use.
A lot of job sites and facilities—especially construction and industrial—want GL on file as part of vendor compliance.
Common benchmark:
- $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate (varies by contract).
How to Choose the Right Limits (and What Happens to Your Premium)
The most reliable way to choose hot shot freight insurance limits is to follow a three-step chain: broker/shipper contract requirements, your highest normal load value, and your truck/trailer replacement costs.
Use this decision chain:
- Your contracts: broker/shipper onboarding packet and rate confirmation requirements.
- Your max normal load value: your real cargo exposure.
- Your asset values: truck/trailer replacement cost plus downtime reality.
The 3 “limit rules” that keep you profitable
Rule #1: The law is the floor—your brokers are the ceiling.
Even if a lower threshold might be legal for a given scenario, brokers can require higher limits. If you want access to more loads, you buy into the market standard.
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 end up missing the load or waiting on endorsements.
Rule #3: Downtime is an uninsured cost—price limits with downtime in mind.
Insurance usually won’t pay for your reputation or lost opportunities while the truck is down, and that indirect cost can hurt more than the deductible.
“How much will higher limits cost me?” (realistic expectations)
Insurance premium for hot shot operators is commonly driven by authority age, radius, commodity, loss history, MVRs, garaging ZIP, equipment value, and where the truck is stored.
- Liability increases can move premium noticeably, especially for new ventures.
- Cargo increases often move in steps, and the $100K → $250K jump is usually the one you feel.
- Physical damage is heavily tied to equipment value and deductible.
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 show insurance as a major operating cost category for carriers. Source: ATRI 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-only hot shot trucking can still face $1M liability and $100K+ cargo expectations because brokers can require higher limits than a state minimum.
State minimums and filings vary; for example, Texas requirements are summarized here: Texas DMV Motor Carrier insurance requirements.
Limit-selection checklist (use this before you bind)
- Pull COI requirements from your top 3 brokers/shippers (don’t guess).
- Write down your highest normal load value (be specific).
- Confirm cargo commodity acceptance and key exclusions (theft, unattended vehicle, 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 (NTL/bobtail gaps happen here).
Frequently Asked Questions
Most hot shot trucking brokers commonly require $1,000,000 primary auto liability and a stated motor truck cargo limit (often $100,000) on your COI before they’ll onboard you. Some broker programs also require general liability (commonly $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate) and specific certificate wording. Your broker packet is the rulebook—if the packet says $1M/$100K and you’re at $750K/$50K, the “cheaper policy” can cost you revenue by cutting off load access.
$1 million liability is often required in practice because many brokers and facilities won’t tender loads without it, even if a lower minimum might apply to a specific operation. FMCSA financial responsibility and filing requirements can vary by operation and commodity, so you should verify your exact requirement for your authority and freight type. A practical way to think about it is: FMCSA rules determine what’s legal, but broker packets determine what’s bookable. Source: FMCSA insurance filing requirements.
$100,000 cargo is a common starting point for many hot shot operators, with $50,000 sometimes workable for lower-value general freight and $250,000 common when you routinely haul higher-value equipment or join broker programs that require more. The best rule is to match cargo to your highest normal load value, not the occasional rare load, and then confirm commodity acceptance and exclusions. For a deeper breakdown of exclusions and claims pitfalls, see motor truck cargo insurance details.
Many hot shot operators need non-trucking liability (bobtail/NTL) when their setup creates off-dispatch exposure, and it’s often written at $1,000,000 depending on the program. NTL can apply when you’re not under dispatch and using the truck for non-business purposes, but the exact trigger depends on policy wording and your dispatch/lease agreement. The main reason to carry it is to reduce the chance of a coverage gap caused by “under dispatch vs off dispatch” confusion. If you’re unsure how it applies to your situation, start here: non-trucking liability (bobtail) insurance explainer.
Conclusion: Pick Limits That Match Your Loads (and Your Brokers)
Hot shot freight insurance limits are about staying bookable and preventing one claim from turning into a business-ending bill.
For many operators, the practical baseline is $1M liability and $100K cargo, then you adjust based on your actual load values, lanes, and broker packets.
Key Takeaways:
- Set liability to what your target brokers require (commonly $1M), not just a minimum you’ve heard online.
- Match cargo to your highest normal load value and confirm exclusions before you assume you’re protected.
- Schedule truck/trailer values realistically and choose deductibles you can fund quickly to avoid downtime.
If you want to lower premium after you’re correctly insured, use proven levers (deductibles, safety controls, radius/commodity fit) instead of underinsuring. Related reading: Affordable trucking insurance (how to save) and the commercial truck insurance guide.