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Business insurance for electricians in New Mexico
Published 2026-06-05 · Updated 2026-06-11 · by Brokly
What insurance do New Mexico electrical contractors need?
Each requirement and definition below cites its statute, regulator, or public reference — full sources at the end of this section.
You're required to have
Covers your electricians' on-the-job injuries — and construction carve-ins start the mandate at one employee in some states.
Required from the first employee for any employer doing work that must be licensed under New Mexico's Construction Industries Licensing Act.
Pays medical care and lost wages when an employee is hurt working. Electrical wiring is treated as construction work in states with construction-industry carve-ins, which apply a lower employee threshold — Missouri and Florida, for example, reach one-employee crews. Electrical work is hands-on construction labor — shock, ladder falls, and overhead work make employee injury the trade's first insured risk.
Typically covers
- Medical bills for a work injury, at rates the state sets
- Part of the injured employee's lost wages
- The employer too: covered employees generally can't sue over the injury
Typically doesn’t
- Injuries outside work
- Independent contractors, in most states
- Lawsuits that get around the can't-sue trade-off — that's the employer's liability part of the same policy
New Mexico pulls licensed construction businesses into workers' comp even with no rank-and-file staff: a construction corporation, partnership, or LLC must carry coverage even if its only worker is a single executive employee (who may exempt themself from benefits but still triggers the requirement), and the Construction Industries Division can suspend or revoke a contractor's license for failing to maintain coverage. A sole proprietor in construction with no employees may elect out by filing the CID Sole Proprietor Affirmative Election form.
Source: New Mexico Workers' Compensation Administration — Employer Guidebook (2022 Edition)
Required in specific situations
Liability and property-damage protection for the service vans and trucks that carry crews to job sites.
New Mexico requires motor vehicles registered in the state to carry minimum auto liability coverage of $25,000 for bodily injury to or death of one person, $50,000 for bodily injury to or death of two or more persons, and $10,000 for property damage in any one accident (25/50/10), under the Mandatory Financial Responsibility Act (NMSA 1978 § 66-5-208).
Required if the business puts owned or leased vehicles on public roads — nearly every state requires auto-liability coverage to operate them.
Commercial auto insurance includes liability and property-damage protection for cars, trucks, and vans used for business — for an electrical contractor, the service vans that carry crews, wire, and tools to customer job sites. The trade runs on service vehicles — crews and materials move to a different customer premises every day.
Typically covers
- Liability when a business vehicle injures someone or damages property
- Accidents in vehicles titled to the business, driven by employees for work
- The liability minimums states set for business vehicles
Typically doesn’t
- Your liability when employees drive their own cars for work — that's hired and non-owned auto; the employee's own car stays on their personal policy
- The freight or goods being hauled — that's cargo or inland marine coverage
- Damage to your own vehicle, unless physical damage coverage is added
Source: New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division — Insurance
A licensing financial guarantee — not insurance for the business — some states require on file before issuing the license.
New Mexico conditions every Construction Industries Division contractor's license — including the electrical (EE-98) classification a business needs to contract electrical work — on filing a fixed $10,000 surety bond as proof of responsibility (NMSA 1978 § 60-13-49), and state law bars municipalities from requiring any additional license bond from state-licensed contractors.
Required if your state's (or city's) licensing law conditions the electrical or contractor license on filing a surety bond — the license won't issue or renew without it.
A contractor license bond is a financial-guarantee instrument the contractor buys from a surety and files with the licensing authority; it protects the public, not the contractor. Where a state conditions the electrical or contractor license on one, it must be on file before the license will issue or renew — the amounts, and which states require it, are below. Where the licensing board demands it, the bond is a gate on the license itself — a contractor in a bond state cannot legally operate without one on file.
Typically covers
- Customers or the state, if you break the licensing board's rules
- The licensing requirement itself — where a board demands a bond, no bond often means no license
Typically doesn’t
- You — the surety collects any payout back from you
- Injuries or property damage from your work — that's general liability
- Big-job performance disputes — a performance bond is its own instrument
Source: NMSA 1978 § 60-13-49 (Construction Industries Licensing Act), official copy hosted by NM Regulation and Licensing Department
Worth a look for this trade
Third-party injury and property damage — including harm your completed wiring causes after the crew has left.
Protects the business against claims of bodily injury, property damage, and personal injury. Its products/completed-operations section pays for damage that occurs away from your premises and is caused by your completed work — the defining electrician exposure, since wiring stays energized in the customer's building long after the job closes. Texas, for comparison, conditions the electrical-contractor license itself on this policy ($300,000 per occurrence, $600,000 aggregate). An electrician's biggest exposure survives the job: a latent wiring fault can damage the customer's building after the crew leaves.
Typically covers
- Injuries to customers, visitors, and other third parties
- Damage your operations cause to someone else's property
- Legal defense for covered claims
Typically doesn’t
- Your employees' injuries — that's workers' compensation
- Mistakes in professional advice or design — that's professional liability
- Redoing your own faulty workmanship itself
Definition source: Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial general liability insurance
Inland-marine coverage for testers, benders, and power tools that live in the van and on job sites.
Inland marine insures movable business property — contractor equipment and property in transit — wherever the work is. For an electrician that means the testers, benders, and power tools riding in the van and sitting on open job sites rather than at a fixed premises. An electrician's tools live in the van and on customer job sites — inland marine is the property line built to follow them.
Typically covers
- Tools and equipment that travel — in trucks, on job sites, between locations
- Theft from a vehicle or job site, a common loss
- Rented or borrowed gear, when it's listed on the policy
Typically doesn’t
- Gradual wear and breakdown
- Tools that stay at your shop — that's commercial property
- The vehicles themselves
Definition source: Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial property insurance guide (inland marine)
Errors-and-omissions coverage for electrical businesses that provide design, load calculations, or design-assist services beyond the installation itself.
Professional liability — errors and omissions — covers losses from errors in judgment, breaches of duty, or negligent acts in the performance of services for others. For an electrical contractor the exposure follows the design side of the trade: if you provide design, load calculations, or design-assist services — sizing a service, laying out circuits, advising on a design-build job — an error there is professional judgment failing rather than workmanship. It is a separate exposure from the jobsite bodily injury and property damage that general liability addresses, and a shop that only installs and repairs to someone else's plans carries little of it. An electrician who designs — service sizing, load calculations, design-assist on design-build work — is selling judgment as well as installation, and judgment errors are a professional exposure of their own.
Typically covers
- Financial harm from advice, designs, or specs that turn out wrong
- Client claims that work failed inspection or missed a professional standard
- Legal defense for those claims — often the largest cost
Typically doesn’t
- Bodily injury or property damage — that's general liability
- Intentional wrongdoing
- Work redone purely as warranty or goodwill
Definition source: NAIC — Glossary of Insurance Terms (errors and omissions / professional liability)
Exact terms live in the policy — these are the typical boundaries.
What does it all cost?
A typical <5-employee electrical shop in New Mexico runs modeled $1.2k–$4.7k/yr in workers’ comp. More benchmarks are on the way to this chart.
bar height = modeled annual cost · tap a bar for that size’s range
Modeled from the $2.37/$100 payroll filed rate (2024) and each band's own observed payroll (CBP 2023). Illustrative — not a quote.
| Size band | Workers’ comp, modeled $/yr |
|---|---|
| <5 employees | ≈$2.1k |
| 5–9 employees | ≈$7.6k |
| 10–19 employees | ≈$19k |
| 20–49 employees | ≈$48k |
| 50–99 employees | ≈$130k |
How New Mexico ranks + full workers’-comp detail →
Benchmarks in progress: Commercial auto · Contractor license bond · General liability · Tools & equipment · Professional liability
Sources & notes
Illustrative benchmark — not a quote or coverage recommendation. What an electrical shop actually needs depends on its operations, contracts, and carrier.
- New Mexico Workers' Compensation Administration — Employer Guidebook (2022 Edition) — as of 2022 Edition; "based upon the law and rules in effect through May 2017"
- Missouri Division of Workers' Compensation — construction-industry employer FAQ
- Florida Statutes § 440.02 (2024) — Florida Senate — as of 2024 statutes
- NAIC — Small Business Insurance
- New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division — Insurance
- NAIC — Auto Insurance topic — as of 2025-09-26
- Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial property insurance guide
- NMSA 1978 § 60-13-49 (Construction Industries Licensing Act), official copy hosted by NM Regulation and Licensing Department — as of statute last amended Laws 2008, ch. 38 § 1 (eff. 2009-07-01); RLD compilation dated 2021-07-01; text confirmed unchanged in 2024 NMSA
- California Contractors State License Board — Bond Requirements
- Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial general liability insurance
- Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation — Electrical Contractor License requirements
- NAIC — Glossary of Insurance Terms (inland marine)
- Oregon DCBS workers' compensation premium rate ranking study, June 2025 (calendar-year 2024 rates) — as of calendar year 2024
- US Census County Business Patterns 2023, state file (Electrical contractors (NAICS 238210)) — as of 2023
Sources retrieved 2026-06-04 – 2026-06-07.
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