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Business insurance for fast food in District of Columbia
Published 2026-06-11 · by Brokly
Covers counter-service (limited-service) restaurants — table-service restaurants and bars are rated separately and aren’t in these figures.
What insurance do District of Columbia fast-food restaurants 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 crew injuries on the job — in a trade OSHA gives its own young-worker safety program.
Required from the first employee — any private employer with one or more employees in the District of Columbia must carry workers' compensation coverage.
Pays for medical care to treat employees injured or made ill by their jobs and replaces part of their lost income — in fast food that means fryer burns and scalds, slips on greasy floors, and cuts on the prep line. The workforce skews young (OSHA notes nearly 30% of restaurant employees are under 20 and maintains a dedicated young-worker safety eTool for the trade), and late-night counter and drive-thru shifts carry the workplace-violence risk OSHA ties to cash on hand, late hours, and contact with the public. It also protects the restaurant from most lawsuits by injured employees. Hot oil, young crews, and late-night cash-handling shifts make employee injury the steady, defining claim source of fast-food work.
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
Source: DC Department of Employment Services, Office of Workers' Compensation — FAQs
Required in specific situations
Liability coverage for restaurant-owned delivery vehicles — and the gap when employees deliver in their own cars.
The District of Columbia requires motor vehicle liability insurance with minimum limits of $25,000 for bodily injury per person, $50,000 for bodily injury per accident, and $10,000 for property damage per accident.
Required if the restaurant runs its own vehicles for delivery — nearly every state requires liability coverage on vehicles operated on its roads, and personal auto policies may not cover business driving.
Covers liability (and optionally vehicle damage) for vehicles the restaurant owns and runs for delivery. Delivery in employees' personal cars is the gap to watch: personal auto policies may not cover driving for business, insurers can deny claims when business use isn't disclosed, and a business's own auto coverage often leaves gaps — hired and non-owned auto (HNOA) coverage is the piece that closes them. Delivery puts the restaurant's business on the road — often in cars it doesn't own — where financial-responsibility laws and personal-policy business-use exclusions bite.
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: Code of the District of Columbia § 31-2406 (Required insurance coverage) — DC Council
Worth a look for this trade
Slip-and-falls in the dining area or drive-thru line — and illness caused by the food you serve.
Protects the restaurant against claims of bodily injury or property damage to others: a customer who slips in the self-service dining area, at the counter, or in the drive-thru queue, or one made ill by food the restaurant served — the CGL's premises and products sections respond to the trade's slip-and-fall and foodborne-illness exposures. A constant flow of walk-in and drive-thru customers plus food as your product means injury exposure every shift.
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
Fire and equipment damage to your space and gear — plus the income lost while you're closed.
Pays to repair or replace the building (or your build-out) and business property — fryers, grills, walk-ins, the counter line — after fire or another covered event. Two endorsements earn their keep in a fast-food kitchen: equipment-breakdown coverage for the machines the menu depends on, and spoilage coverage for refrigerated stock lost when cooling fails. Business-interruption coverage pays for income lost while a damaged restaurant can't operate. Fryers and grills run hot oil and open flame all day, making fire the defining property exposure — and a dead walk-in can take the inventory with it.
Typically covers
- Your building if you own it, and improvements if you lease
- Equipment, fixtures, furniture, and inventory inside
- The common causes of loss — fire among them
Typically doesn’t
- Flood and earthquake on standard forms — separate policies
- Property in transit — that's inland marine coverage
- The income you lose while closed — that's business interruption coverage
Definition source: Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial property insurance guide
Customer card data and the point-of-sale systems every order runs through — exposure standard business policies don't cover.
Helps the restaurant respond when customer payment-card or loyalty-account data is exposed, or when the point-of-sale and ordering systems every sale runs through are knocked out by an attack. Cyber policies are built for the costs standard policies aren't — most commercial property and general liability policies don't cover cyber risks — from data and system restoration to credit monitoring, business interruption, and litigation. Sales run through the POS all day — payment-card and ordering-app data plus that system dependence give even a single location real cyber exposure.
Typically covers
- The fallout of a hack or data breach — notifying customers, restoring data and systems
- Claims from customers whose data was exposed
- Often the income lost while systems are down
Typically doesn’t
- Physical damage to property — that's commercial property
- Tricked-into-wiring-money losses on many forms — social-engineering coverage is its own add-on
- Breaches at your vendors, unless the policy extends to them
Definition source: FTC — Cybersecurity for Small Business
Exact terms live in the policy — these are the typical boundaries.
What does it all cost?
A typical <5-employee fast-food restaurant in District of Columbia runs modeled $290–$1.2k/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 $0.74/$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 | ≈$630 |
| 5–9 employees | ≈$1.5k |
| 10–19 employees | ≈$3k |
| 20–49 employees | ≈$6.2k |
| 50–99 employees | ≈$12k |
How District of Columbia ranks + full workers’-comp detail →
Benchmarks in progress: Commercial auto · General liability · Commercial property · Cyber insurance
Sources & notes
Illustrative benchmark — not a quote or coverage recommendation. What a fast-food restaurant actually needs depends on its operations, contracts, and carrier.
- DC Department of Employment Services, Office of Workers' Compensation — FAQs
- Texas Department of Insurance — Workers' compensation insurance guide — as of updated 2024-11-19
- OSHA — Young Worker Safety in Restaurants eTool
- NAIC — Small Business Insurance
- Code of the District of Columbia § 31-2406 (Required insurance coverage) — DC Council — as of current code; section last amended Mar. 13, 2019 (D.C. Law 22-239)
- Texas Department of Insurance — Delivering packages? What to know about auto insurance — as of updated 2024-10-14
- NAIC — Auto Insurance topic — as of 2025-09-26
- Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial general liability insurance — as of updated 2021-01-20
- Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial property insurance guide — as of updated 2025-12-09
- FTC — Cybersecurity for Small Business
- NAIC — Cybersecurity topic — as of page updated 2024-05-09
- 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 (Limited-service restaurants (NAICS 722513)) — as of 2023
Sources retrieved 2026-06-04 – 2026-06-11.
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