Commercial Insurance · Commercial Umbrella
Commercial Umbrella Insurance for Texas Businesses
Understanding this coverage is essential for Texas businesses and property owners. An independent agent who shops 18+ carriers matches your specific needs to the most competitive rate available in the Texas market.
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The “My GL Limits Are Enough” Trap
- Contractors and construction firms — high injury risk on job sites, heavy equipment, and third-party property exposure
- Commercial property owners — tenant injuries, premises liability, and environmental claims can stack up fast
- Restaurants and bars — slip-and-fall injuries, food contamination claims, and Texas dram shop liability for alcohol service
- Transportation and trucking companies — commercial auto claims regularly produce seven-figure verdicts in Texas
The Real Numbers
- Medical practices and professional firms — malpractice is separate, but umbrella covers the general liability gap
- Retail businesses with high foot traffic — more visitors means more premises liability exposure every single day
- Any business with company vehicles — one serious accident can exhaust a $1 million auto policy instantly
- Industry classification — contractors and restaurants pay more than office-based businesses due to higher loss frequency
The Coverage Decision Framework
- Annual revenue — higher revenue generally means higher premiums because it signals more business activity and exposure
- Number of employees — more employees means more employers liability exposure
- Claims history — prior umbrella or underlying claims in the last five years will increase your rate
- Fleet size and driver records — commercial auto exposure is a primary driver of umbrella pricing in Texas
The Canopy Advantage
- Canopy shops 18+ carriers in a single session — catching the pricing spreads between carriers that most Texas businesses never see when buying direct from a single company
- Your dedicated account manager handles the entire process from quoting through binding — eliminating the back-and-forth delays of online-only platforms and call-center runarounds
- Annual policy reviews catch changes in your business or property — growth, new exposures, shifting market conditions — adjusting coverage before a claim exposes a gap
- Canopy’s 99.1% client retention rate reflects proactive service that keeps coverage optimized and premiums competitive year after year without you needing to ask
How much does a $1,000,000 umbrella policy cost?
See the detailed section below for a complete answer to this question.Is there a commercial umbrella policy?
See the detailed section below for a complete answer to this question.How much does commercial umbrella insurance cost?
See the detailed section below for a complete answer to this question.The Bottom Line Up Front
Every Texas business with liability exposure needs commercial umbrella insurance. A single lawsuit can blow through your underlying policy limits in minutes, and a $1 million umbrella policy costs most businesses between $500 and $3,000 per year. That is some of the cheapest sleep-well-at-night coverage you can buy. If your business has employees, vehicles, commercial property, or any interaction with the public, an umbrella policy is not optional — it is the layer that keeps one bad day from becoming a total loss.What Commercial Umbrella Insurance Actually Covers
Commercial umbrella insurance provides excess liability coverage that sits on top of your existing business policies. When a claim exceeds the limits of your general liability, commercial auto, or employers liability policy, the umbrella kicks in and pays the difference up to its own limit. It is not a replacement for underlying coverage — it is the safety net above it.Claims Covered by a Commercial Umbrella
- Bodily injury lawsuits that exceed your general liability limits — a customer slips at your Austin storefront and the jury awards $2.3 million
- Auto accident liability that blows past your commercial auto policy — your delivery driver causes a multi-vehicle accident on I-35
- Employers liability claims above your workers comp employers liability limits — an employee sues for workplace negligence outside the comp system
- Advertising injury and personal injury claims that exhaust underlying coverage — defamation, copyright infringement, or invasion of privacy lawsuits
- Legal defense costs once the underlying policy's defense obligation is exhausted — attorney fees in protracted litigation can run six figures alone
- Property damage liability that exceeds your GL limits — your contractor crew damages a neighboring building during demolition in Houston
Who Needs Commercial Umbrella Insurance in Texas
The short answer is almost every business. But certain industries and business profiles face outsized liability exposure, and for those operations, umbrella coverage is not just smart — it is essential to staying in business after a major claim hits.Businesses That Should Carry Umbrella Coverage
- Contractors and construction firms — high injury risk on job sites, heavy equipment, and third-party property exposure
- Commercial property owners — tenant injuries, premises liability, and environmental claims can stack up fast
- Restaurants and bars — slip-and-fall injuries, food contamination claims, and Texas dram shop liability for alcohol service
- Transportation and trucking companies — commercial auto claims regularly produce seven-figure verdicts in Texas
- Medical practices and professional firms — malpractice is separate, but umbrella covers the general liability gap
- Retail businesses with high foot traffic — more visitors means more premises liability exposure every single day
- Any business with company vehicles — one serious accident can exhaust a $1 million auto policy instantly
Texas-Specific Risk: Texas follows a modified comparative fault rule. If your business is found even 51% at fault, you could be liable for the entire judgment. Umbrella coverage protects against these outsized awards that Texas juries are increasingly willing to hand down.
Coverage Limits and What They Cost
Commercial umbrella policies are sold in increments of $1 million, and most Texas businesses can purchase anywhere from $1 million to $10 million in coverage. The cost depends on your industry, revenue, number of employees, claims history, and how much underlying coverage you carry.| Coverage Type | What It Does | Typical Limits | Annual Cost Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Underlying GL Policy | Pays first-dollar liability claims up to policy limit | $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate | $500 – $5,000 |
| Commercial Umbrella | Pays excess liability above underlying limits; may include drop-down coverage | $1M – $10M | $500 – $3,000 (per $1M) |
| Excess Liability Policy | Follows form of underlying policy only — no broader coverage, no drop-down | $1M – $25M | $400 – $2,500 (per $1M) |
Factors That Affect Your Premium
- Industry classification — contractors and restaurants pay more than office-based businesses due to higher loss frequency
- Annual revenue — higher revenue generally means higher premiums because it signals more business activity and exposure
- Number of employees — more employees means more employers liability exposure
- Claims history — prior umbrella or underlying claims in the last five years will increase your rate
- Fleet size and driver records — commercial auto exposure is a primary driver of umbrella pricing in Texas
- Underlying coverage limits — higher underlying limits can actually reduce your umbrella premium because the umbrella is less likely to be triggered
Umbrella vs. Excess Liability: The Difference Matters
These terms get used interchangeably, but they are not the same product. Understanding the difference matters because it determines whether you have coverage when a claim falls outside your underlying policy's scope. Getting this wrong can leave a gap exactly when you need coverage most.A commercial umbrella policy does two things an excess policy does not. First, it can provide broader coverage than your underlying policies — meaning it may cover claims that your GL or auto policy excludes. Second, it can "drop down" and act as primary coverage when the underlying policy does not respond to a covered claim.An excess liability policy strictly follows the form of your underlying coverage. It only pays when your underlying policy pays first and is exhausted. If the underlying policy excludes the claim, the excess policy excludes it too. No drop-down, no broader coverage.Ask Your Agent: When you are quoted an "umbrella" policy, ask specifically whether it includes drop-down coverage and whether it provides any broader coverage beyond the underlying policies. Some carriers market excess policies as umbrellas. The declarations page and policy form will tell you the truth.
Drop-Down Coverage: The Hidden Value
Drop-down coverage is what separates a true umbrella from an excess policy, and it is the feature most business owners do not know they have — or do not have. When your underlying policy does not cover a claim but your umbrella does, the umbrella drops down and responds as if it were the primary policy, subject to a self-insured retention.When Drop-Down Coverage Activates
- Underlying policy has a coverage gap — your GL excludes a specific type of claim that the umbrella covers
- Underlying aggregate is exhausted — you have already used up your GL aggregate for the year and another claim comes in
- No underlying policy in place — the umbrella may cover a liability category you do not carry separate coverage for, subject to a self-insured retention (typically $10,000 to $25,000)
- Underlying policy cancelled or non-renewed — the umbrella may still respond, but you will owe the self-insured retention out of pocket
When $1 Million Is Not Enough
A $1 million umbrella is the most common starting point for small Texas businesses, but it is not always adequate. The decision to carry higher limits should be based on your actual exposure, not just what feels like a big number. Revenue, asset value, contract requirements, and industry risk all factor in.Revenue-Based Sizing Guidelines
- Under $500K revenue — $1 million umbrella is typically sufficient for low-risk service businesses
- $500K to $2M revenue — $2 million to $3 million umbrella recommended, especially with employees or vehicles
- $2M to $10M revenue — $5 million umbrella is the baseline; contractors and transportation companies should consider higher
- Over $10M revenue — $5 million to $10 million minimum; consider layered excess programs for larger operations
- Contract requirements — many Texas commercial leases and general contractor agreements require $5 million or more in umbrella coverage regardless of revenue
Claims That Commonly Trigger Umbrella Policies
- Multi-vehicle commercial auto accidents — a company truck causes a pileup on I-10 with multiple injured parties
- Catastrophic premises injuries — a structural failure at your business location injures several people
- Product liability mass claims — multiple consumers injured by the same product you manufactured or distributed
- Construction site accidents — a worker or bystander suffers a life-altering injury on your job site
- Wrongful termination and employment practices — jury awards in employment cases routinely exceed $1 million in Texas



