Carpenter insurance is a bundle of commercial policies designed to protect carpentry businesses from the liability, property, and injury risks that come with hands-on construction work. Every carpenter, from a solo trim installer to a framing crew taking on tract development along the I-84 corridor, carries real exposure: a client trips over a stack of lumber, a table saw blade kicks back and injures a helper, or a trailer full of finish tools gets broken into overnight. The right insurance doesn't eliminate those events, but it does keep one bad day from gutting your business. Bittick is an independent agency, so we shop your coverage across multiple carriers and match the policy to what you actually do, not a generic contractor template.

What this coverage includes

General liability for jobsite and completed work

General liability insurance covers third-party bodily injury and property damage that happens because of your work, or because of work you already finished. If a homeowner steps on a nail you left in a subfloor, or a cabinet you installed pulls away from a wall six months after the job closed, this coverage responds to the claim and any legal defense costs that follow. For carpenters working directly inside clients' homes and commercial spaces, general liability is the foundational piece of the whole policy stack.

Workers' compensation for your crew

Carpentry is physically demanding. Saws, nail guns, heavy sheet goods, repetitive overhead work, and elevated surfaces all create injury exposure that most other businesses don't face. Workers' compensation covers your employees' medical bills and a portion of lost wages when they're hurt on the job. In Idaho, most employers with one or more employees are required to carry it. Beyond the legal requirement, it also limits your personal liability when an injured worker's costs would otherwise come back to you directly.

Inland marine coverage for tools and materials in transit

Inland marine insurance protects your tools, equipment, and materials while they're moving between your shop, your truck, and the jobsite. Standard commercial property insurance typically covers items only at a fixed location. A framing nailer stolen from an unlocked trailer in a Nampa parking lot, or a load of custom millwork damaged on the way to a client's house, falls into a coverage gap that inland marine closes. If your tools are your livelihood, this one matters.

Commercial auto for work vehicles

If you or an employee drives a truck, van, or any vehicle for work purposes, personal auto insurance won't cover an at-fault accident that happens during a work trip. Commercial auto insurance covers the vehicle, the driver, and any liability to the other party. For carpentry operations running multiple crew vehicles across Treasure Valley job sites, this coverage is essential and often required by general contractors before they'll let you on site.

Crime coverage and cyber liability

Crime insurance steps in if an employee is caught stealing from a client, covering the loss so the relationship doesn't fall entirely on you. Cyber liability coverage matters if you store client contact information, contracts, or payment data digitally. A small carpentry business is not immune to phishing or a ransomware attack, and the cleanup costs are rarely covered by a general liability or property policy.

Pairs well with

General Liability Insurance

Covers third-party injury and property damage claims that arise from your work, on-site or after the job is complete. The first policy most carpentry businesses need in place.

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Workers' Compensation Insurance

Required by Idaho law for most employers and critical for any carpentry operation where crew members handle power tools, heavy materials, or work at height.

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Inland Marine Insurance

Fills the gap between your shop and the jobsite by covering tools, equipment, and materials in transit, a gap standard property policies won't touch.

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Commercial Auto Insurance

Protects work trucks and vans against at-fault accidents, damage, and liability claims. Personal auto policies exclude most business-use driving.

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Business Owner's Policy (BOP)

Bundles general liability and commercial property coverage into one policy. A practical starting point for smaller carpentry shops looking to cover the basics efficiently.

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Commercial Umbrella Insurance

Extends your liability limits above what general liability alone provides. Useful when a general contractor requires higher limits as a condition of the subcontract.

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What this coverage protects against

Common risks and how this coverage addresses them. Tap any scenario to expand.

  • A homeowner trips on materials left in a hallway during a trim install.

    The risk

    You're installing baseboards in a new Eagle home and step out to grab materials from the truck. The homeowner walks through, catches a foot on a bundle of casing, and falls, fracturing a wrist. They file a claim for medical expenses and lost wages.

    How this coverage helps

    General liability coverage responds to the bodily injury claim, including the homeowner's medical bills and any legal defense costs if the situation escalates to a lawsuit. You focus on finishing the job; the carrier handles the claim.

  • A framing crew member tears a rotator cuff on a commercial project.

    The risk

    One of your framers is lifting engineered lumber on a multi-family development in Meridian when he pulls his shoulder badly enough to require surgery and six weeks off work. Without coverage, the medical bills and wage replacement land on your business.

    How this coverage helps

    Workers' compensation pays for the employee's medical treatment and replaces a portion of his wages during recovery. It also limits your exposure to a direct lawsuit from the injured worker in most circumstances.

  • Your tool trailer gets broken into at a Nampa job site overnight.

    The risk

    You park a trailer loaded with finish tools, a miter saw, and a compressor on a residential street near a Nampa job. Overnight, someone pops the hitch lock and takes everything inside. Replacing the equipment out-of-pocket would set you back several thousand dollars and delay the project.

    How this coverage helps

    Inland marine insurance covers the stolen tools because the loss happened in transit rather than at a permanent business location. You file the claim, replace the equipment, and stay on schedule.

  • A cabinet installation pulls loose from a wall three months after project completion.

    The risk

    You installed a custom upper cabinet run in a Boise kitchen. Months later, the mounting hardware fails and the cabinets fall, damaging the countertop and injuring the homeowner's child. The client argues the installation was defective and files a claim.

    How this coverage helps

    The completed operations portion of your general liability policy covers property damage and bodily injury that result from finished work. The policy responds to the claim and legal defense even though the job closed months earlier.

  • An employee crew member rear-ends another driver on the way to a job site.

    The risk

    One of your carpenters is driving a company truck up Highway 55 to a hillside lot job when traffic stops suddenly and he rear-ends the vehicle ahead. The other driver sustains a neck injury and the truck needs significant repair. Your employee's personal auto policy excludes business use.

    How this coverage helps

    Commercial auto insurance covers the liability claim against your business and the cost to repair your truck. Without it, you'd be paying both out of pocket while potentially facing a lawsuit from the other driver.

  • A helper is discovered pocketing materials charged to a client's job.

    The risk

    A client reviews invoices and notices materials were billed that don't appear in the finished work. You investigate and find a helper has been taking lumber and hardware home for personal use. The client demands reimbursement and your relationship is at risk.

    How this coverage helps

    Crime insurance covers the theft loss attributed to the dishonest employee, letting you make the client whole without absorbing the full cost yourself. It protects the client relationship and your business's reputation.

  • Client contact and payment data is compromised in a phishing attack.

    The risk

    You receive an email that appears to be from a materials supplier and click a link that installs malware. The attacker accesses the folder where you store client contracts, addresses, and credit card information for deposit billing. You're now legally obligated to notify those clients.

    How this coverage helps

    Cyber liability coverage helps pay for notification costs, credit monitoring for affected clients, and any regulatory fines tied to the breach. It also covers costs to restore or recover compromised data, expenses a standard business policy won't touch.

Frequently asked questions

How much does carpenter insurance cost in Idaho?
Premiums vary based on your annual revenue, the number of employees you have, the type of carpentry you do, and your claims history. A solo finish carpenter working residential jobs typically pays less than a framing contractor running several crews on commercial projects. The best way to get a realistic number is to get a quote specific to your operation, which Bittick can pull from multiple carriers.
Do I need workers' comp if I'm the only employee?
In Idaho, most businesses with one or more employees are required to carry workers' compensation. If you're a sole proprietor with no employees, you may be exempt, but you also have no coverage for your own injuries on the job. Many general contractors and homebuilders require proof of workers' comp before allowing subcontractors on site, so it's worth having regardless of the legal minimum.
What's the difference between general liability and completed operations coverage?
General liability covers injuries and property damage that happen while you're actively on the job. Completed operations coverage extends that protection to claims that arise after the work is done, for example, a stair tread you installed that breaks and injures someone six months later. Most general liability policies for contractors include completed operations, but the limits and how long coverage extends can vary. Ask your agent to walk through both.
Will my personal auto policy cover my work truck if I'm in an accident on the way to a job site?
Almost certainly not. Personal auto policies typically exclude accidents that occur while the vehicle is being used for business purposes. If you drive a truck or van to and from job sites, haul tools, or have employees driving company vehicles, you need commercial auto insurance. The exposure is real on every trip, not just during active construction.
Does carpenter insurance cover tools stolen from my vehicle or trailer?
Standard general liability and commercial property policies generally don't cover tools and equipment in transit. That gap is what inland marine insurance is built to close. If your miter saw, nail guns, or other gear are stolen from a truck bed or trailer parked off-site, inland marine is the coverage that pays. Make sure your policy specifically lists tools in transit as a covered category.
Can Bittick write carpenter insurance if I work in Texas or other states?
Yes. Bittick is licensed in CA, CO, ID, NV, OR, TX, VA, and WA. We have a San Antonio office that handles Texas-based contractors and can place coverage for carpenters who work across state lines. The requirements for workers' comp, liability limits, and licensing vary by state, so we factor that in when building the policy.

Get a carpenter insurance quote built for your trade

Tell us what you build and where you work, and we'll put together a coverage package that actually fits your operation.

Don't like forms? Contact us at 208-609-3511 or email us.