Estimate commercial auto fleet insurance costs based on number of vehicles, vehicle types, driver records, radius, and hired/non-owned auto.
Commercial auto insurance covers vehicles owned, leased, or used by your business. Fleet policies covering multiple vehicles often qualify for discounts compared to individual policies. Premiums depend on the number and type of vehicles, driver records, operating radius, and coverages selected.
This calculator estimates your commercial auto fleet premium based on vehicle count, average per-vehicle cost by type, hired and non-owned auto coverage, and fleet discount tiers. It provides a starting point for budgeting and comparing carrier quotes.
This is an educational estimate only. Commercial auto rates vary significantly by state, specific vehicle make/model, driver MVR records, cargo type, and use classification. Work with a commercial auto specialist for accurate binding quotes. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation. By automating the calculation, you save time and reduce the risk of costly errors in your planning and decision-making process.
Commercial auto is a required coverage for any business-owned vehicle. Fleet policies with 5+ vehicles often qualify for premium discounts and simplified administration. Understanding pricing factors helps fleet managers budget accurately and negotiate better terms with carriers. Having a precise figure at your fingertips empowers better planning and more confident decisions.
Per-Vehicle Premium by Type: Sedan $1,200, Van $1,800, Light Truck $2,400, Heavy Truck $4,500 Fleet Discount: 5-9 vehicles 5%, 10-24 vehicles 10%, 25+ vehicles 15% Radius Factor: Local 0.90, Regional 1.0, Long-Haul 1.30 Hired/Non-Owned: +$500 flat Estimated Premium = (Vehicles × Per-Vehicle Rate × Radius Factor × (1 - Fleet Discount)) + Hired/Non-Owned
Result: $16,700/year
Base: 10 vans × $1,800 = $18,000. Regional radius: × 1.0 = $18,000. Fleet discount (10 vehicles): 10% = $1,800 off → $16,200. Plus hired/non-owned $500 = $16,700.
For businesses with five or more vehicles, fleet policies offer significant advantages: volume discounts, simplified administration, blanket coverage for newly acquired vehicles, and a single renewal date. Individual policies for each vehicle cost more and create administrative headaches.
When employees rent cars for business trips or use their personal vehicles for work errands, your business is exposed to liability. If an accident occurs, the business can be sued. Hired and non-owned auto coverage fills this gap at a very low cost relative to the protection it provides.
Beyond fleet discounts, implement driver safety programs, use telematics for monitoring, maintain vehicles properly, choose appropriate deductibles, and review your fleet composition annually. Removing underutilized vehicles reduces premium and total cost of ownership.
Commercial auto covers liability (bodily injury and property damage to others), physical damage (collision and comprehensive for your vehicles), medical payments, uninsured/underinsured motorist, and hired/non-owned auto. Liability is the most important coverage.
Hired auto covers vehicles you rent or lease temporarily. Non-owned auto covers liability when employees use their personal vehicles for business errands. Both are critical gaps that the employee's personal auto policy may not fully cover.
Most carriers offer premium discounts for insuring multiple vehicles: typically 5% for 5-9 vehicles, 10% for 10-24, and 15-20% for 25+. Consolidated fleet policies also simplify administration with one policy, one renewal, and one audit.
Drivers with clean MVRs (motor vehicle reports) get the best rates. Accidents, DUIs, and moving violations significantly increase premiums. Many fleet policies require MVR checks and exclude high-risk drivers.
Physical damage (collision and comprehensive) coverage is optional on owned vehicles. For older, lower-value vehicles, the premium may exceed the potential claim. Consider dropping physical damage when the premium exceeds 10% of the vehicle's value.
No. Standard commercial auto policies cover the vehicle, not its cargo. You need separate inland marine or cargo insurance to cover goods in transit. Motor truck cargo insurance is required for for-hire trucking operations.