Equipment rental insurance is a group of commercial policies that protects a rental company's physical fleet, its premises, and its liability when equipment leaves the yard. No single policy covers everything a rental operation faces, so most businesses need two or three coordinated policies working together. The right mix depends on what you rent out, who rents it, and how long it stays off your lot. Bittick is an independent agency, which means we shop multiple carriers and put together a program specific to your inventory and risk profile, rather than dropping you into a one-size-fits-all policy.

What this coverage includes

Commercial property: your buildings and your fleet at rest

A commercial property policy covers the physical assets your business owns and occupies, including your office, storage buildings, and warehouse space. Critically, it also extends to the rental inventory sitting on your lot waiting to go out. If a fire, windstorm, or vandalism damages equipment between rentals, this is the policy that pays to repair or replace it. For Treasure Valley operators, freeze-thaw cycles and wildfire-season hazards make this coverage especially worth reviewing carefully each year.

Inland marine: your fleet while it's in customers' hands

Inland marine insurance sounds like a maritime term, but in commercial coverage it means protection for movable property away from your premises. For a rental business, that translates to coverage on your equipment once it rolls off your lot. A generator on a construction site in Nampa, a skid steer at a landscaping job in Star, a lift at a Meridian commercial build-out: all of those are exposure points your commercial property policy won't reach. Inland marine fills that gap.

General liability: when your equipment causes third-party harm

General liability insurance covers bodily injury and property damage that your business causes to people who aren't your employees. In a rental context, this matters because a court can find you partly liable for damage caused by your equipment even when a customer was operating it. If a renter injures a bystander using a piece of equipment they weren't qualified to handle, your business may face a claim. General liability is the policy that responds to those third-party suits and settlement costs.

Workers' compensation: protecting your own team

If you have employees loading, servicing, or transporting rental equipment, Idaho law requires workers' compensation coverage, and Texas has its own set of employer rules. Workers' comp pays medical costs and a portion of lost wages when an employee is hurt on the job. For a rental yard, that includes injuries during equipment maintenance, loading accidents, and delivery runs. It also limits your exposure to employee lawsuits arising from workplace injuries.

Commercial umbrella: extra capacity above your primary limits

A commercial umbrella policy sits above your general liability, commercial auto, and employers' liability limits. If a serious claim exhausts your underlying policy, the umbrella steps in to cover the remainder up to its own limit. Equipment rental businesses face outsized liability exposure because the equipment itself can cause significant property damage or serious injuries. An umbrella gives you a meaningful buffer above the base limits without requiring you to dramatically over-buy on every individual policy.

Pairs well with

Commercial Auto Insurance

If your business owns trucks or trailers used to deliver or retrieve equipment, those vehicles need a commercial auto policy. Personal auto coverage does not apply to vehicles used for business hauling.

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Cyber Liability Insurance

Rental businesses that take card payments or store customer records online carry data-breach exposure. Cyber liability pays for notification costs, regulatory defense, and recovery expenses if your systems are compromised.

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Commercial Umbrella Insurance

Heavy equipment can cause catastrophic damage in a single incident. An umbrella policy extends your liability limits so one large claim doesn't exceed your primary coverage and land directly on your business.

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Workers' Compensation Insurance

Idaho and Texas both have employer obligations when an employee is hurt on the job. Workers' comp covers medical bills and partial wage replacement and keeps your business in compliance with state law.

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General Liability Insurance

Third-party bodily injury and property damage claims follow rental businesses everywhere the equipment goes. General liability is the foundational policy that responds when someone outside your company is harmed.

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What this coverage protects against

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

  • A renter without proper training injures someone at a Meridian job site.

    The risk

    A contractor rents a compact excavator from your yard and lets an untrained crew member operate it. The machine clips a neighboring worker, causing a serious injury. The injured party's attorney names your rental business in the suit, arguing you had a duty to verify operator competence before handing over the keys.

    How this coverage helps

    Your general liability policy responds to the third-party bodily injury claim, covering defense costs and any judgment or settlement up to your policy limits. Strong rental contracts that specify operator qualifications can also limit your exposure, and Bittick can help you think through how policy terms and contract language work together.

  • A customer loans your equipment to a friend, who disappears with it.

    The risk

    Your rental agreement is with the original customer, but they hand off a trailer-mounted generator to a friend who never returns it. You are now short one piece of inventory worth several thousand dollars, and the original renter claims no responsibility for what happened after the hand-off.

    How this coverage helps

    An inland marine policy covering your fleet while it is off your premises can pay for the replacement cost of the missing generator so your operations are not stalled while you pursue the customer legally. Your rental contract language also plays a role, and Bittick can flag coverage gaps before they become expensive surprises.

  • A winter freeze cracks hydraulic lines on equipment stored in your Eagle yard.

    The risk

    A hard freeze overnight drops temperatures well below what your stored equipment was designed to handle without winterization. Hydraulic fluid expands, lines crack, and several pieces of inventory need significant repair before they can go back out on rent.

    How this coverage helps

    Commercial property coverage on your inventory at rest picks up the repair costs, subject to your deductible. Reviewing your policy each fall before freeze season to confirm your inventory values are current is a straightforward step that Bittick walks clients through every year.

  • Your delivery truck is rear-ended on I-84 while hauling a rented lift.

    The risk

    One of your drivers is returning a boom lift from a Star job site when another vehicle hits the truck from behind on the interstate. The truck is damaged, the lift sustains frame damage, and the driver has a back injury that requires medical attention.

    How this coverage helps

    Commercial auto insurance handles the vehicle damage and the liability exposure from the accident. Workers' compensation steps in separately to cover the driver's medical bills and lost time. Having both policies coordinated means neither claim falls into a gray zone between coverages.

  • A customer's credit card data is stolen from your booking system.

    The risk

    Your rental business accepts card payments through an online reservation platform. A breach exposes customer card numbers and contact information. You are required by law to notify affected customers, and several dispute fraudulent charges tied to your system.

    How this coverage helps

    Cyber liability insurance covers the notification costs, credit monitoring you provide to affected customers, and legal defense if a customer sues over the breach. Without it, those costs come directly out of your operating budget.

  • An employee tears a rotator cuff unloading a skid steer from a trailer.

    The risk

    Unloading heavy equipment from a flatbed is physically demanding work. A longtime yard employee slips on a wet ramp while guiding a skid steer off a trailer and suffers a significant shoulder injury that requires surgery and several months of recovery.

    How this coverage helps

    Workers' compensation covers the surgery, physical therapy, and a portion of the employee's wages while they are unable to work. Idaho law requires this coverage for businesses with employees, and carrying it also limits your exposure to a civil lawsuit from the injured worker.

  • Rented equipment is stolen from an unsecured Caldwell job site overnight.

    The risk

    A renter leaves one of your compact track loaders parked on an open lot over a long weekend. By Monday morning the machine is gone. The renter says their rental agreement didn't specify they were responsible for securing the equipment, and they expect you to absorb the loss.

    How this coverage helps

    Inland marine coverage on your off-premises equipment pays for the replacement cost of the stolen machine, so your rental fleet stays complete. Clear rental contract terms spelling out renter responsibility for security are a smart companion to the policy, and Bittick can review how both work together for your operation.

  • A liability claim exceeds the limits on your general liability policy.

    The risk

    A large piece of rented equipment causes structural damage to a building on a commercial project. The property damage claim is significant enough that it exhausts your general liability policy limit before all damages are settled, leaving a remaining balance that the plaintiff pursues directly against your business.

    How this coverage helps

    A commercial umbrella policy picks up where the underlying general liability policy stops, covering the remaining judgment amount up to the umbrella's limit. For rental businesses handling heavy or high-value equipment, umbrella coverage is one of the more cost-effective ways to protect against a single catastrophic claim.

Frequently asked questions

How much does equipment rental insurance cost in Idaho?
There is no standard rate because the premium depends heavily on what you rent out, the total value of your fleet, your annual revenue, your claims history, and where you operate. A small tool-rental shop in Caldwell carries very different exposure than a crane and heavy-lift yard in Boise. Bittick shops your account across multiple carriers and can usually give you a realistic range once we understand your inventory and operations.
Does my general liability policy cover damage customers cause to my equipment?
No. General liability covers third-party claims, meaning damage your business causes to other people or their property. Damage to your own equipment is a property coverage question, and the answer depends on whether the equipment is on your premises (commercial property) or off it (inland marine). Many equipment rental businesses carry both, and there are endorsements designed specifically for rental fleet exposure.
Should I require customers to carry their own insurance before renting heavy equipment?
For high-value or high-hazard equipment, requiring renters to show proof of their own liability coverage is a sound risk management practice. It gives you a second layer of protection if an incident occurs. Some rental businesses build this requirement into their contract for anything above a certain equipment value or for machinery that requires a license or certification to operate. Bittick can help you think through where that threshold makes sense for your business.
What happens if a renter doesn't return my equipment?
Non-return is a real exposure for rental businesses, and it sits in a complicated space between an insurance claim and a legal matter. Inland marine and commercial property policies are designed around physical damage and theft, not contract breach, so your rental contract language and your state's abandoned-property statutes matter here. Bittick can point you toward the right coverage questions to raise with your attorney and help identify what your current policy does and doesn't address for non-return situations.
Do I need separate coverage for equipment I deliver to job sites versus equipment customers pick up themselves?
Potentially, yes. Equipment on your lot is covered under your commercial property policy. Once it leaves your property, inland marine takes over. If your employees are the ones transporting it, your commercial auto policy is also in play for the vehicle and the transit exposure. Each handoff point is worth reviewing to make sure there are no gaps between policies. Bittick coordinates across all three coverages so you are not left guessing which policy applies at which moment.
Does Bittick write equipment rental insurance outside of Idaho?
Yes. Bittick is licensed in CA, CO, ID, NV, OR, TX, VA, and WA. Our San Antonio office serves equipment rental businesses across the Texas Hill Country and the I-35 growth corridor north of the city, where construction activity has driven significant demand for rental fleet coverage. If you operate in multiple states, we can discuss how coverage requirements differ by jurisdiction.

Get a quote for your rental operation

Tell us what you rent out and we will identify the right combination of carriers and coverages for your fleet and your risk profile.

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