Excavation contractor insurance is a package of commercial coverages designed to protect contractors who dig, grade, clear, and haul earth for a living, addressing the property, liability, and environmental exposures that are specific to that type of work.

An excavation crew in the Treasure Valley might spend Monday grading a hillside lot in the Eagle foothills, Tuesday clearing a new commercial pad off Eagle Road in Meridian, and Wednesday running equipment down to a utility trench along the Nampa corridor. Each site, each task, each day carries a different exposure. Bittick works with multiple carriers to assemble coverage that actually fits the scope of what you do, not a generic contractor policy pulled off the shelf.

What this coverage includes

General Liability and Umbrella Protection

A commercial general liability (CGL) policy covers third-party bodily injury and property damage claims that arise from your work. If a passerby is hurt near your open excavation or your crew accidentally damages an underground utility line, general liability responds first. The problem is that excavation losses tend to be large, and a standard CGL limit can run out fast. Pairing your CGL with a commercial umbrella policy extends those limits so a single serious claim does not exhaust your coverage before the bills stop coming in.

Equipment and Materials Coverage

Excavators, skid steers, compactors, and laser grading systems represent serious capital. A builders risk policy can cover equipment and materials while they sit on an active job site. But the moment that equipment is loaded on a trailer and rolling down I-84 to the next job, builders risk typically does not follow it. That gap is what inland marine insurance fills: it protects your equipment and tools while they are in transit or stored off-site, which for most excavation contractors is a substantial portion of every workday.

Commercial Auto for Your Fleet

Excavation fleets are not ordinary company cars. You have dump trucks, flatbeds hauling heavy iron, crew cabs with trailers, and sometimes self-propelled equipment that moves between sites under its own power. A personal or standard business auto policy is not structured for that mix of vehicles and uses. Commercial auto insurance for excavation contractors accounts for higher-weight vehicles, equipment hauling, and the fact that multiple employees are behind the wheel on any given day.

Premises Liability for Your Job Sites

An open excavation is a hazard even when your crew goes home for the night. Courts have long recognized active construction sites as attractive nuisances, meaning a landowner or contractor can face liability if someone is injured on the site, even if that person was trespassing. Premises liability coverage addresses injury claims that arise from the physical condition of a site you control, including claims from subcontractors of other trades working alongside you.

Environmental Impairment Coverage

Standard general liability policies typically exclude pollution-related claims. On an excavation site, that exclusion matters. A ruptured fuel line can contaminate soil across a wide radius. Dust and noise complaints from neighboring properties can generate legal costs whether or not your crew did anything wrong. Traffic from heavy equipment can damage surrounding land. Environmental impairment liability (EIL) insurance covers cleanup costs, third-party claims, and defense costs tied to these kinds of pollution and contamination events.

Pairs well with

Commercial Property Insurance

Covers your office, yard, shop, and stored materials at your home base of operations. Most excavation contractors have significant equipment and supply inventory off-site that needs property protection too.

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Workers Compensation Insurance

Excavation work is physically demanding and injury-prone. Workers compensation pays medical costs and lost wages when an employee is hurt on the job, and Idaho requires it for most employers with one or more employees.

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Employment Practices Liability Insurance

EPLI covers defense costs and damages if a current or former employee brings a claim of harassment, discrimination, or wrongful termination. It is relevant for any contractor with a growing workforce.

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Cyber Liability Insurance

Even field-heavy businesses carry sensitive data: employee records, bank accounts, client contracts. Cyber liability covers costs if your systems are breached or your accounts are compromised.

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Contractor's Professional Liability

If your crew provides design-build grading plans or site consulting in addition to physical excavation, professional liability (errors and omissions) covers claims that your advice or plans caused a financial loss.

What this coverage protects against

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

  • Utility strike on a commercial site in Meridian.

    The risk

    Your excavator operator follows the dig ticket, but an unmarked secondary conduit runs shallower than the utility map showed. The auger cuts through fiber infrastructure, knocking out service to several neighboring tenants. The utility company and tenants file claims totaling well above six figures.

    How this coverage helps

    General liability coverage responds to the third-party property damage and business interruption claims. If the total claim approaches or exceeds your CGL limit, a commercial umbrella policy picks up the difference so you are not personally responsible for the gap.

  • Fuel spill contaminates an adjacent residential lot.

    The risk

    An on-site diesel tank develops a slow leak over a weekend. By Monday morning, fuel has migrated through the sandy loam into the neighboring property. Cleanup estimates come in at over $80,000, and the neighboring homeowner is threatening a lawsuit.

    How this coverage helps

    Environmental impairment liability insurance covers the remediation costs and the legal defense. Standard general liability would not respond here because most CGL policies carry a pollution exclusion. EIL is the coverage designed for exactly this kind of event.

  • An unsecured trench draws a trespasser after dark.

    The risk

    A residential subdivision site is fenced, but a section of temporary fencing gets knocked down by wind. A teenager cuts across the property at night and falls into an open trench, suffering a broken leg. The family files a personal injury claim naming your company.

    How this coverage helps

    Premises liability coverage addresses bodily injury claims arising from conditions on a site you control, including injuries to trespassers under the attractive nuisance doctrine. Coverage pays medical bills and defense costs so the claim does not come directly out of your operating account.

  • Equipment loss during transport on a mountain highway.

    The risk

    A mini excavator strapped to a trailer breaks free on a winding stretch of Highway 55 north of Eagle and is damaged beyond repair. The machine is worth $65,000. The loss happens between job sites, not on anyone's property.

    How this coverage helps

    Inland marine insurance follows your equipment in transit. Builders risk and commercial property policies generally cover equipment at a fixed location; inland marine is the policy that travels with your gear, covering transit and off-site storage losses.

  • Grading work sends runoff onto a neighboring property.

    The risk

    A hillside lot grading project in the Boise foothills redirects stormwater in a way that was not part of the original plan. The next rain event pushes sediment onto a neighbor's landscaped yard and partially floods their detached garage. They hire an attorney and demand restoration costs.

    How this coverage helps

    General liability covers third-party property damage claims like this one. If the scope of the claim is significant, an umbrella policy provides the additional limits to protect your business assets from a judgment that exceeds your primary policy.

  • A company truck is at fault in a highway accident.

    The risk

    One of your drivers is hauling a loaded dump truck on I-84 toward Nampa when traffic stops suddenly. The truck rear-ends a passenger vehicle. The driver of the other car sustains injuries, and medical bills plus vehicle damage create a liability exposure well above personal auto limits.

    How this coverage helps

    Commercial auto insurance covers liability, medical payments, and property damage for accidents involving your business vehicles. Because your fleet includes heavy-duty trucks operating under commercial conditions, the limits and structure of a commercial auto policy are built for this kind of exposure in a way that standard auto insurance is not.

  • A subcontractor on the same site is injured near your spoil pile.

    The risk

    A plumbing subcontractor walks across your work zone to reach their trench and twists an ankle on loose spoil material you excavated earlier in the day. They miss three weeks of work and file a claim against your company.

    How this coverage helps

    General liability covers bodily injury claims from third parties, including other tradespeople working on the same project. Your policy responds to the claim and covers defense costs even if you ultimately are not found at fault.

  • Employee harassment claim during a hiring push.

    The risk

    You double your crew size to handle a run of new commercial contracts. A recently hired employee files a complaint alleging discriminatory treatment during the onboarding process. Defending the claim, even successfully, generates substantial attorney fees.

    How this coverage helps

    Employment practices liability insurance (EPLI) covers legal defense costs and potential settlements for claims involving discrimination, harassment, or wrongful termination. It is a separate policy from your CGL and is worth carrying any time your headcount is growing.

Frequently asked questions

How much does excavation contractor insurance cost in Idaho?
There is no flat rate because premiums depend on factors like your annual revenue, number of employees, the types of equipment you operate, and your claims history. Environmental and umbrella coverages add to the total but also protect against the largest potential losses. The best way to understand your cost is to get quotes from multiple carriers, which is exactly what Bittick does as an independent agency.
Is general liability enough, or do excavation contractors need an umbrella policy too?
General liability is the foundation, but excavation losses can be expensive quickly. A single utility strike, a serious injury, or an environmental claim can exceed a standard CGL limit. A commercial umbrella policy sits above your primary coverage and picks up costs after those underlying limits are exhausted. For most excavation contractors doing commercial-scale work, the umbrella is worth serious consideration.
What is inland marine insurance and why does an excavation contractor need it?
Inland marine is a coverage category that protects property while it is moving or stored off a fixed location. For excavation contractors, it covers your equipment, tools, and materials while they are in transit between job sites or staged at a location other than your main yard. Builders risk covers equipment on a specific job site, but it does not follow your gear down the highway. Inland marine fills that gap.
Does standard general liability cover fuel spills or dust complaints from neighbors?
Most general liability policies include a pollution exclusion that specifically carves out contamination-related claims. A fuel spill that migrates off-site, sediment runoff into a drainage channel, or a dust complaint from a neighboring property owner may all fall outside your CGL coverage. Environmental impairment liability (EIL) is the separate policy designed to cover those situations.
Do I need a separate commercial auto policy if I already have personal auto coverage on my trucks?
Yes. Personal auto policies are not built for vehicles used in commercial operations, especially heavy-duty trucks that haul equipment or carry significant payloads. A commercial auto policy provides appropriate liability limits, covers employees driving your vehicles, and accounts for the type of use that comes with running an excavation business. Driving a company dump truck under a personal policy creates a real coverage gap.
Does Bittick write excavation contractor insurance in other states besides Idaho?
Yes. Bittick is licensed in CA, CO, ID, NV, OR, TX, VA, and WA. We also have an office in San Antonio serving excavation and construction contractors across the San Antonio metro and the Texas Hill Country. If your work crosses state lines or you operate in multiple markets, we can work with carriers that write on a multi-state basis.

Get Coverage That Matches the Work You Actually Do

Tell us about your operation and we will shop multiple carriers to put together a policy structure that covers your equipment, your sites, and your crew.

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