General Liability
For electrical contractors, liability coverage is about more than a generic “slip and fall” concept. It is about the reality that your work interfaces with buildings, tenants, equipment, owners and public-facing spaces. If a finished wall is damaged, if a customer alleges your work contributed to a later electrical problem, or if a completed job becomes the center of a dispute, this policy often is the first layer that matters. Many electricians also need liability limits that satisfy property owners, general contractors or municipalities before a project can begin.
Commercial Auto
Vans and pickups are not just transportation — they are rolling tool rooms and dispatch points. If a vehicle is in an accident on North Avenue, Bluemound, Mayfair Road or one of the side streets feeding residential neighborhoods, the loss can involve liability, physical damage to the van, schedule disruption and loss of access to tools. If employees occasionally use personal vehicles for pickups or business errands, hired and non-owned auto may need to be part of the conversation too.
Workers Compensation
Electricians work in environments that can produce falls, strains, cuts, burns and repetitive-motion injuries. Once you have employees, workers comp becomes a critical operational line. It is not just about compliance; it is about protecting your business from serious disruption when a crew member gets hurt. For growing companies, payroll classification accuracy and audit preparation matter because surprises at audit time can sour an otherwise good year.
Tools, Equipment & Materials
Electrical businesses can carry significant value in portable gear. Specialty meters, battery tools, ladders, reels, lasers, knockouts and temporary materials move around constantly. Some sit overnight in a vehicle. Some sit on a site. Some get shifted between crews. Inland marine and related tool coverage can be one of the most practical lines in the whole package because theft and accidental loss are not abstract problems for trades.