Garage Keepers Insurance for Texas Auto Shops: Coverage, Cost, and Why Your GL Policy Leaves You Exposed
If your Texas business has custody of customers’ vehicles — even for an hour — you need garage keepers insurance. Your general liability policy specifically excludes damage to vehicles in your care, custody, or control, which means a single hailstorm, shop fire, or theft can destroy dozens of customer vehicles with zero coverage responding. Texas garage keepers insurance costs $1,800–$2,800 per year for most shops and comes in three coverage forms — legal liability, direct primary, and direct excess — and choosing the wrong one means you pay out of pocket for damage you thought was covered. An independent agent who shops Progressive Commercial, Amwins, Kinsale, and other specialty carriers matches your shop’s vehicle count and risk profile to the most competitive rate.
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What Garage Keepers Insurance Actually Is
- Covers damage to customers’ vehicles while in YOUR possession — fire, theft, vandalism, collision, hail — filling the gap that general liability explicitly excludes for property in your care, custody, or control
- General liability covers a customer who slips in your waiting room — garage keepers covers the $45,000 BMW in your service bay when a tech drops it off the lift or a hailstorm hits your lot overnight
- Three coverage forms exist (legal liability, direct primary, direct excess) and choosing the wrong one means a hailstorm that damages 15 cars on your lot produces zero payout under the cheapest form
- Without it, one totaled customer vehicle can cost $30,000–$60,000 in direct payment — and a single Texas hailstorm can damage every vehicle on your lot simultaneously, creating six-figure exposure in twenty minutes
Who It’s For (and What It Costs)
- Texas garage keepers insurance costs $1,800–$2,800/year depending on number of vehicles stored, lot size, security measures, and whether you choose legal liability or direct primary coverage
- Required for any TX business that takes physical custody of customer vehicles — repair shops, body shops, tow yards, car washes with valet, parking garages, dealerships with service bays, and tire/lube shops
- Your commercial general liability policy explicitly excludes property in your “care, custody, or control” — meaning every customer car on your premises is unprotected without separate garage keepers coverage
- Carriers writing TX garage keepers include Progressive Commercial, Amwins, Kinsale, DealerPlus, Prime Insurance, and Risk Theory — pricing varies 40–60% between carriers for the same shop profile
How the Three Coverage Forms Work
- Legal liability (cheapest): pays ONLY if your shop is found negligent — a hailstorm hits 15 cars on your lot and the policy pays nothing because weather damage is not your fault
- Direct primary (recommended): pays for damage regardless of fault — hailstorm, theft, vandalism, fire all covered even when your shop did nothing wrong, protecting both your finances and your customer relationships
- Direct excess (middle ground): pays regardless of fault but only AFTER the customer’s own auto insurance pays first — cheaper than direct primary but creates friction when customers file claims
- The premium difference between legal liability and direct primary is typically $500–$1,500/year — a manageable amount for dramatically better protection that preserves your shop’s reputation
The Canopy Advantage
- Canopy shops Progressive Commercial, Amwins, Kinsale, and 14+ carriers writing Texas garage keepers policies — matching your shop’s vehicle count, lot size, and coverage form preference to the most competitive rate
- Choosing between legal liability, direct primary, and direct excess forms requires understanding how each handles weather damage, customer disputes, and at-fault scenarios — Canopy walks you through which form fits your specific operation
- Your dedicated account manager bundles garage keepers with garage liability, commercial auto, and workers comp into a single package — reducing total premium through multi-policy credits unavailable when buying coverages separately
- Annual reviews catch growth — adding a second bay, expanding your tow fleet, or increasing your lot capacity — adjusting your garage keepers limits before a claim exposes a coverage gap on a busy Monday morning
How much is garage keepers insurance?
Texas garage keepers insurance costs $1,800–$2,800 per year for most shops. Cost depends on the number of vehicles you store, lot security measures, coverage form (legal liability vs direct primary), your claims history, and business location. High-value shops servicing luxury or exotic vehicles may pay $5,000–$10,000 per year due to higher per-vehicle exposure.What is covered under garage keepers insurance?
Garage keepers insurance covers damage to customers’ vehicles while in your care — fire, theft, vandalism, collision, and employee negligence. Direct primary policies also cover weather damage (hail, wind, flood) regardless of fault. It does NOT cover your own vehicles, your building, customer injuries, or personal belongings left inside vehicles. Those require separate policies.What is another name for garage keepers insurance?
Garage keepers insurance is sometimes called “bailee coverage” because it covers property belonging to someone else (a bailee) that is temporarily in your custody. It is distinct from garage liability insurance, which covers bodily injury and property damage from your general business operations — not damage to the vehicles themselves.What Garage Keepers Insurance Covers
Garage keepers insurance covers physical damage to customers’ vehicles while they are in your care, custody, or control. This includes damage from collisions, fire, theft, vandalism, hail, flood, and employee negligence. It is a specific coverage form designed for businesses that temporarily possess vehicles they do not own.Covered Causes of Loss
- Fire and explosion: A welding spark ignites a customer’s vehicle, or a shop fire spreads to stored vehicles overnight
- Theft: A customer’s vehicle is stolen from your lot or a break-in results in stolen parts from a vehicle in your bay
- Vandalism: Someone damages customer vehicles parked in your lot after hours
- Hail and windstorm: Texas hailstorms can damage every vehicle on your lot in twenty minutes — this happens regularly from March through June across DFW, Central Texas, and the Panhandle
- Collision: Your employee damages a customer’s vehicle while moving it in the shop or on a test drive
- Flood: Flash flooding in Houston, Austin, or San Antonio submerges customer vehicles stored at your facility
- Employee negligence: A technician drops a tool on a hood, scratches paint during service, or damages an interior during repair work
Who Needs Garage Keepers Insurance in Texas
Any business that takes temporary possession of customers’ vehicles needs this coverage. The list extends well beyond traditional repair shops. If a customer hands you their keys, you have a bailee obligation under Texas law and a corresponding insurance need.Businesses That Need Garage Keepers Coverage
- Auto body and collision repair shops: Vehicles sit on your lot for days or weeks waiting for parts and repairs
- General auto repair and mechanic shops: Even a few hours in your bay creates custody exposure
- Auto detailing and car wash businesses: You take possession, move the vehicle, and perform work on it
- Tow truck companies: You have custody from the moment you hook the vehicle until it is released to the owner
- Parking garages and valet services: You take the keys and assume responsibility for the vehicle
- New and used car dealerships: Customer trade-ins and vehicles left for service are in your care
- Tire shops and quick lube facilities: Short-duration custody still counts — a lot fire does not care how long the car has been there
- Auto glass repair shops: You move and work on customer vehicles during windshield replacement
Coverage Options: Legal Liability vs Direct Coverage
Garage keepers insurance comes in three forms, and the one you choose determines when and how the policy pays. This is the most important decision in your garage keepers coverage.| Coverage Form | When It Pays | Who It Protects | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Legal Liability | Only when your business is legally at fault | Your business against liability claims | Budget-conscious shops with low vehicle volume |
| Direct Primary | Pays for damage regardless of fault | Both your business and the customer’s vehicle | Shops wanting maximum customer protection |
| Direct Excess | Pays after the customer’s own auto insurance is exhausted | Fills the gap above the customer’s coverage | Broad protection at lower cost than direct primary |
How Each Form Works in Practice
- Legal liability scenario: A hailstorm damages 15 customer vehicles on your lot overnight. You were not at fault. Legal liability coverage does not pay because you did not cause the damage. Every customer files a claim against you anyway, and you fight 15 separate disputes
- Direct primary scenario: Same hailstorm, same 15 vehicles. Direct primary coverage pays for all the damage regardless of fault. Your customers are made whole, your reputation is intact, and you avoid 15 angry confrontations
- Direct excess scenario: Same hailstorm. Your coverage kicks in after each customer’s own auto insurance pays. Customers with comprehensive coverage file through their own carrier first. Customers without comprehensive are covered by your policy
- Cost difference: Direct primary is typically 20–40% more than legal liability. Direct excess falls in between. For most Texas shops, the premium difference is $500–$1,500 per year — a manageable amount for significantly better protection
Garage Keepers vs Garage Liability vs General Liability
These three coverages sound similar but protect against completely different risks. Confusing them is one of the most common insurance mistakes Texas auto shops make.Understanding the Three Coverages
- Garage keepers insurance: Covers physical damage to customers’ vehicles in your care, custody, or control. This is property coverage for other people’s vehicles
- Garage liability insurance: Covers bodily injury and property damage arising from your garage operations. This is your equivalent of general liability plus commercial auto for garage businesses, combined into one policy form
- General liability insurance: Covers bodily injury and property damage from your premises and general operations but specifically excludes property in your care, custody, or control
- The gap: If you carry only general liability or only garage liability, you have no coverage for damage to customer vehicles. Garage keepers fills that specific gap and is typically added as coverage within the garage liability policy
Coverage Limits and Cost
Garage keepers insurance is structured with per-vehicle limits and aggregate limits. The per-vehicle limit is the maximum the policy pays for damage to any single customer vehicle. The aggregate limit is the maximum for all garage keepers claims during the policy period.Typical Coverage Amounts and Pricing
- Per-vehicle limits: Commonly $50,000–$150,000 per vehicle; shops servicing high-value vehicles may need $250,000 or higher
- Aggregate limits: Typically $100,000–$500,000; should reflect the maximum total value of customer vehicles on your premises at any given time
- Deductibles: Range from $250 to $2,500 per claim; higher deductibles reduce premium but increase out-of-pocket exposure per incident
- Annual premium: $1,800–$2,800 per year for most Texas auto shops — up to $4,000 for larger operations and $5,000–$10,000 for luxury/exotic shops
- Hail exposure: Texas shops in hail-prone areas (DFW, Central Texas, Panhandle) may face higher premiums or separate hail deductibles on outdoor-stored vehicles
Common Claims and How They Play Out
The claims that hit Texas auto shops most frequently are weather-related damage, employee errors, and theft. Each one tests a different part of your coverage.Real-World Claim Scenarios
- Hailstorm hits your lot: 20 customer vehicles sustain dent damage. With direct primary, your policy pays for all repairs. With legal liability only, you are not at fault, so the policy does not respond — you tell 20 customers to file on their own auto insurance
- Technician error: Your mechanic drops a transmission on a customer’s car, causing $8,000 in damage. All three forms cover this because your employee caused the damage — legal liability responds because you are at fault
- Overnight theft: A customer’s vehicle is stolen from your lot. If your lot was properly secured, legal liability may not respond because you exercised reasonable care. Direct primary pays regardless
- Shop fire: An electrical fire destroys three customer vehicles. All coverage forms typically respond because fire is a covered peril, and if the fire originated from your equipment, you are likely liable anyway
- Flood damage: Flash flooding fills your lot with two feet of water. Eight customer vehicles are totaled. Direct primary pays. Legal liability likely does not, unless you knew flood risk existed and failed to move vehicles
The Bottom Line
Garage keepers insurance is the coverage that protects the assets you do not own — your customers’ vehicles. In Texas, where hailstorms can devastate an entire lot in minutes and flash floods can roll through without warning, this coverage is not something you can afford to skip or undersize. The difference between legal liability and direct primary coverage is a few hundred dollars a year, and it is the difference between telling your customers their vehicles are covered no matter what and telling them to call their own insurance company.For most Texas auto shops, direct primary coverage is worth the premium because it protects your reputation as much as it protects the vehicles. Get your aggregate limit right, make sure your per-vehicle limit covers the most expensive car you are likely to service, and review the policy annually as your business grows.Next step: Get a free quote from Canopy Insurance and let a dedicated account manager match your shop’s garage keepers coverage to the right carrier, coverage form, and limit structure.Frequently Asked Questions
Does garage keepers insurance cover test drives?
Garage keepers insurance covers damage to the customer’s vehicle during a test drive, since the vehicle is still in your care, custody, or control. However, if your employee causes an accident during a test drive and injures another driver, that liability claim falls under your garage liability policy, not your garage keepers coverage. Garage keepers covers the customer’s vehicle; garage liability covers the injury and damage you cause to others.What if a customer’s vehicle is damaged by another customer’s vehicle on my lot?
If one customer’s vehicle rolls into another on your lot, both vehicles are in your care, custody, or control and both are covered under your garage keepers policy. The key question is fault — with legal liability, you need to be at fault (perhaps your employee left a vehicle in gear). With direct primary, both vehicles are covered regardless of how the incident occurred.Does garage keepers cover personal belongings inside the customer’s vehicle?
Generally, no. Garage keepers insurance covers the vehicle itself and permanently installed equipment (stereo systems, custom wheels). Personal belongings left inside — laptops, phones, tools, bags — are typically excluded. Some policies offer limited coverage for personal effects, but it is not standard.How does the deductible work on garage keepers claims?
The deductible typically applies per claim, not per vehicle. If a single event — such as a hailstorm — damages multiple customer vehicles, that is usually one claim with one deductible. However, some carriers apply deductibles per vehicle for certain types of losses, particularly weather-related damage. Check your specific policy language.Do I need garage keepers insurance if I only do mobile auto repair?
If you work on a customer’s vehicle at their location and never take possession, you likely do not need garage keepers coverage. However, if you tow vehicles to your location, store them overnight, or take the keys and move them, you have care, custody, and control — and you need garage keepers insurance.Can I be sued even if I have garage keepers insurance?
Yes. Having insurance does not prevent lawsuits. A customer whose vehicle is damaged can sue you, and your garage keepers insurance responds by providing legal defense and paying covered damages up to your policy limits. If the damage exceeds your per-vehicle or aggregate limit, you are personally liable for the excess.What should I do immediately after a customer’s vehicle is damaged at my shop?
Document everything immediately — take photos of the damage, write down what happened, when it happened, and who was involved. Notify your insurance carrier as soon as possible. Do not admit fault or agree to pay for repairs out of pocket before talking to your insurer. Contact the customer promptly and professionally.Does garage keepers insurance cover vehicles stored outdoors?
Yes. Garage keepers covers customer vehicles whether stored inside your shop, in a covered structure, or parked in your outdoor lot. However, outdoor storage increases exposure to weather damage, which can affect your premium. Some carriers may apply separate hail deductibles for outdoor-stored vehicles in hail-prone areas of Texas.EJ Nadolny is the founder and principal agent of Canopy Insurance Texas, an independent insurance agency based in San Antonio. With deep expertise in home, auto, commercial, and specialty insurance lines, EJ leads a team that represents 18+ carriers across Texas. His approach focuses on finding the right coverage at the right price by shopping the market on behalf of every client — not pushing a single carrier’s products.



