HVAC contractor insurance is a bundle of commercial coverages that protects heating, ventilation, and air conditioning businesses against the liability, property, and vehicle exposures that come with working in customers' homes and commercial buildings every day. Your trucks move constantly, your technicians work in tight mechanical spaces and on rooftops, and your equipment is expensive. A single incident, an injury at a client's home, a refrigerant line mistake that damages drywall, a stolen tool van, can cost more than most small contractors can absorb out of pocket. Bittick is an independent agency, so we shop your coverage across multiple carriers and place the policies that actually match how your business operates here in the Treasure Valley.

What this coverage includes

General liability: coverage when something goes wrong on a customer's property

General liability insurance pays for third-party bodily injury and property damage claims that arise out of your work. If a technician accidentally cracks a tile running new ductwork in a Meridian home, or a customer trips over a tool bag in their hallway while your crew is there, general liability covers the legal costs and any damages. Most commercial building owners and general contractors in the Treasure Valley require proof of general liability before they'll let you on site. An umbrella liability policy can sit on top of your general liability and commercial auto limits to provide additional capacity for catastrophic claims.

Commercial property and inland marine: protecting your tools and equipment

Your inventory of refrigerant, coils, thermostats, and sheet metal, plus the compressors and diagnostic equipment your technicians rely on, represents a significant investment. A commercial property policy covers that equipment while it sits at your shop or yard. Inland marine insurance (despite the name, it has nothing to do with boats) covers the same tools and materials while they're in transit between your shop and a job site, or staged at a customer's building overnight. If a van full of equipment is broken into or a storm damages materials stored outside, inland marine fills the gap that a standard property policy leaves.

Workers' compensation: required coverage for your technicians

Idaho law requires most employers to carry workers' compensation, and HVAC is exactly the kind of trade where it earns its keep. Your techs work on rooftops during summer heat, in crawlspaces with limited clearance, and around live electrical panels. Falls, heat exhaustion, burns, and musculoskeletal injuries from lifting equipment are all documented claims in this industry. Workers' comp pays for medical treatment and a portion of lost wages when an employee is hurt on the job, and it protects you from most civil lawsuits by injured workers. Coverage limits and class codes need to reflect the specific tasks your crews perform.

Commercial auto and hired/non-owned auto: covering the vehicles your business depends on

A commercial auto policy covers the vans, trucks, and trailers your company owns for accidents, liability, and physical damage, including theft and vandalism. Personal auto policies routinely exclude vehicles used for business purposes, so a technician driving a company-owned truck needs commercial coverage. If any of your employees use their personal vehicles to run parts, pick up supplies, or get to a second job site, hired and non-owned auto insurance fills that gap. It extends liability protection to your business for accidents that happen in vehicles you don't own.

Professional liability and EPLI: coverage for the business side of operations

Professional liability insurance (sometimes called errors and omissions) pays defense costs and damages if a client claims your work caused property damage or financial loss due to negligence, for example, an improperly sized system that fails repeatedly after installation. Employment practices liability insurance (EPLI) covers defense costs and settlements if a current or former employee alleges discrimination, harassment, or wrongful termination. As HVAC companies in the Treasure Valley grow and hire, EPLI becomes more relevant. Cyber liability coverage is also worth considering as customer data, payment systems, and dispatch software become standard parts of running a modern HVAC operation.

Pairs well with

Commercial General Liability

The foundation of any HVAC contractor's insurance program. Covers third-party bodily injury and property damage arising from your work, your premises, or your completed operations.

Learn more ›

Commercial Auto Insurance

Covers company-owned vehicles for liability and physical damage. Essential for any HVAC business running a fleet of service vans or trucks.

Learn more ›

Workers' Compensation Insurance

Required under Idaho law for most employers. Pays medical costs and lost wages when a technician is injured on the job, and shields the business from most related civil claims.

Learn more ›

Inland Marine Insurance

Extends coverage to tools, equipment, and materials while they're in transit or stored at a customer's location, where a standard property policy won't reach.

Learn more ›

Commercial Umbrella Insurance

Provides additional liability limits above your general liability and commercial auto policies. One large claim from a serious injury or significant property loss can exhaust primary limits quickly.

Learn more ›

Professional Liability Insurance

Pays defense costs and damages if a client claims a design error, faulty installation, or negligent repair caused them financial harm or property damage.

Learn more ›

What this coverage protects against

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

  • Customer injured while your crew works in their home.

    The risk

    A homeowner in Eagle steps around a technician's equipment staged in the hallway, loses footing, and breaks a wrist. They hold your business responsible and file a claim for medical bills and lost wages.

    How this coverage helps

    General liability covers the homeowner's medical costs and your legal defense if they sue. Without it, even a relatively minor injury claim can run well into five figures before it resolves.

  • Refrigerant line mistake floods a finished basement.

    The risk

    During an evaporator coil replacement in a Star home, a pressure test goes wrong and a copper line ruptures, sending water across a recently finished basement floor. The homeowner's damage estimate comes back at $18,000.

    How this coverage helps

    General liability's property damage coverage applies to accidental damage your crew causes during a job. If the client alleges the mistake was due to faulty workmanship, professional liability may also be relevant depending on how the claim is structured.

  • Service van stolen with a full load of equipment inside.

    The risk

    An overnight call leaves a technician's van parked at a commercial strip center in Meridian. By morning, the van and several thousand dollars in diagnostic tools, refrigerant, and parts are gone.

    How this coverage helps

    Commercial auto covers the vehicle itself. Inland marine covers the tools and equipment inside it, which a commercial auto policy typically excludes. Having both means you can replace the van and restock the van without paying out of pocket.

  • Technician injured on a rooftop unit replacement.

    The risk

    One of your senior techs slips on a wet rooftop surface during an early fall job in Boise and fractures an ankle. He's out of work for six weeks and needs surgery.

    How this coverage helps

    Workers' compensation covers his medical bills and a portion of his wages during recovery. It also limits your exposure to a civil lawsuit from an injured employee, which can be far more expensive than the claim itself.

  • Employee rear-ends another vehicle hauling equipment to a job.

    The risk

    A technician towing a trailer of sheet metal to a new construction site on the east side of Nampa misjudges a stop and rear-ends the car in front of them. The other driver's vehicle needs significant repairs and they report neck pain.

    How this coverage helps

    Commercial auto covers the liability for the other driver's injuries and vehicle damage, and covers physical damage to your truck and trailer. A personal auto policy would have denied the claim because the vehicle was being used for business purposes.

  • Client claims a new system was sized or installed incorrectly.

    The risk

    Six months after your crew installs a new commercial HVAC system for a Caldwell office building, the owner says the system can't maintain temperature in part of the building and blames the original load calculation. They demand you pay for a replacement unit and lost productivity.

    How this coverage helps

    Professional liability insurance covers your defense costs and any damages a court or arbitrator awards if the negligence claim holds. General liability alone typically excludes errors in professional judgment or design.

  • Former employee files a discrimination claim.

    The risk

    A technician you let go during a slow season files a complaint alleging the termination was discriminatory. Even if your documentation supports the business decision, defending against an employment claim requires legal counsel from the first letter.

    How this coverage helps

    Employment practices liability insurance covers defense costs, settlements, and judgments from employment-related claims. For growing HVAC companies adding staff quickly, EPLI is often one of the first gaps we help fill.

Frequently asked questions

Does Idaho require HVAC contractors to carry specific insurance?
Idaho requires most employers to carry workers' compensation insurance. Beyond that, many commercial property managers and general contractors in the Treasure Valley require a certificate of general liability insurance before they'll allow any subcontractor on site. Some licensing boards may also have minimum liability requirements. We can pull together the certificates and documentation you need for a specific job or contract.
How much does HVAC contractor insurance cost in Eagle or Boise?
Cost depends on your payroll size, number of vehicles, annual revenue, claims history, and the specific coverages you need. A small owner-operator will pay significantly less than a company running six vans and a crew of ten. Because Bittick is independent, we get quotes from multiple carriers rather than locking you into one company's pricing. The best way to get a useful number is to walk through your operation with us so we're quoting the right scope.
Are my technicians' hand tools covered under my commercial property policy?
A standard commercial property policy covers tools and equipment at your listed business location. Tools in a work van or staged at a customer's job site are usually excluded, which is exactly what inland marine insurance covers. If you're unsure where your current policy draws that line, send us the declarations page and we'll read it with you.
What if my employees drive their personal trucks to job sites?
Your commercial auto policy covers vehicles the business owns, not employee-owned vehicles. If an employee has an accident while driving their personal truck on company business, your business can still face a liability claim but your commercial auto policy won't respond. Hired and non-owned auto insurance closes that gap. It's usually an inexpensive endorsement and worth adding if any personal vehicle use happens at all.
Do I need professional liability if I already have general liability?
General liability covers physical accidents: someone gets hurt, something gets broken. Professional liability covers claims that your professional judgment or workmanship was negligent, for example, an undersized system, an incorrect refrigerant charge, or a control wiring error that caused ongoing problems. The two policies address different kinds of claims, and a dissatisfied commercial client is more likely to frame a complaint as an errors-and-omissions issue than as a simple property damage claim.
Does Bittick serve HVAC contractors outside of Idaho?
Yes. Bittick is licensed in CA, CO, ID, NV, OR, TX, VA, and WA, and we have a second office in San Antonio serving contractors in the Texas market as well. If your business operates across state lines or you're based outside the Treasure Valley, reach out and we'll confirm what we can place in your state.

Get coverage that fits how your HVAC business actually works

Tell us about your operation and we'll put together quotes from multiple carriers so you can compare options side by side.

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