Workers' Compensation for insulation contractors
Workers' compensation insurance is required in most states if you have employees — and insulation work carries real occupational hazards: chemical exposure from spray foam, respiratory risks from blown-in materials, working in tight attic spaces, and fall hazards. WC must be placed with the right insulation class codes and carriers that understand the trade.

- Medical benefits for work-related injuries
- Lost wage replacement for injured workers
- Occupational disease coverage for chemical exposure
- Employer's liability protection
- Correct insulation and spray foam class codes
- Coverage for attic, crawlspace, and confined space work
- Nationwide WC placement
Common questions about workers' compensation
WC class codes for spray foam and insulation work vary by state and carrier. The critical issue is that spray foam installers must not be coded under generic construction or maintenance codes — the insulation-specific chemical exposure profile requires the right code for both coverage and audit accuracy.
Yes. Occupational disease claims from spray foam chemical exposure — including isocyanate sensitization and respiratory conditions — are WC claims. Workers who develop health conditions from spray foam exposure are entitled to WC medical and wage benefits.
Employer's liability (Part B of a WC policy) covers claims by injured employees who sue the employer beyond standard WC benefits. For spray foam contractors where workers may allege that the employer's failure to control isocyanate exposure caused their illness, employer's liability provides an additional layer of protection.
Contractors Choice Agency (NPN 8608479) is a specialty insurance agency licensed in all 50 states, founded in 2005 and based in Chandler, Arizona. We focus exclusively on contractors — with particular depth in specialty trades like insulation, spray foam, and other specialty contractor niches.
We use a mix of admitted carriers (licensed and rate-regulated in the state) and E&S (excess and surplus lines) carriers for insulation contractors. Spray foam and CPL coverage typically requires E&S markets. GL and WC for standard insulation work may be available with admitted carriers.
Call 844-967-5247 or use our online quote form. We'll need to know your business type (residential, commercial, or both), services offered (blown-in, batt, spray foam, etc.), states you operate in, annual revenue or payroll, employee count, and loss history.
Yes. Once your policy is bound, we issue certificates of insurance typically within the same business day. If a specific additional insured or job-specific certificate is needed, provide the details and we'll issue it promptly.
Claims are filed directly with your carrier. We assist with the claims reporting process and can help you communicate with the carrier if you have questions. Contact us at josh@contractorschoiceagency.com or 844-967-5247 when a claim arises.
Yes. Most of our carrier partners offer premium financing and monthly payment options. Ask about payment plans when we provide your quote.
There's no minimum, though smaller operations may have fewer carrier options. We work with startups, solo operators, and established insulation businesses. Tell us your situation and we'll find what's available.
Yes. Many insulation contractors work as subcontractors to GCs. We structure your program to meet standard GC insurance requirements — including waiver of subrogation endorsements, additional insured status for GCs, and adequate limits.
Yes. Most commercial GL policies cover both residential and commercial work operations. If the mix shifts significantly toward commercial, your limits and pricing may change at renewal. We'll structure the policy to reflect your actual work mix.
Not typically in the GL policy structure, but underwriters are aware of the different risk profiles. Closed-cell foam is denser and requires more chemical per square foot; open-cell is softer and more vapor-permeable. Some CPL underwriters ask specifically which SPF types you install.
Yes. Weatherization work — air sealing, vapor barriers, insulation upgrades — is typically covered under insulation contractor GL policies. If weatherization includes HVAC or mechanical work, that should be disclosed to the underwriter.
Most commercial GL policies can be endorsed to add new states as you expand. WC requires separate policies in most states, so adding a state for WC means a new policy in that state. Contact us when you're expanding to a new state and we'll get the endorsements in place.
We review your program 60–90 days before renewal. If your operations have changed — new services, new states, more employees — update us so we can re-market if needed. We proactively shop your renewal to make sure you're still in the right market at the right price.
E&O (also called professional liability) covers claims arising from professional advice or design errors — for example, if you specified an SPF product for a particular R-value and the recommendation was wrong, leading to energy performance failures. Not all insulation contractors need E&O, but those who provide energy audit advice or system design should consider it.
Pair it with related coverage
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