Business insurance for roofers in North Carolina

Published 2026-06-11 · by Brokly

What insurance do North Carolina roofing contractors need?

Direct answer: Required once you have three or more employees regularly employed in the same business or establishment. 5 more coverages match how roofing contractors work: Commercial auto, Contractor license bond, General liability, Tools & equipment, Professional liability.

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 roofing crews' on-the-job injuries — and construction carve-ins start the mandate at one employee in some states.

Required by law$7.5k–$30k/yrtypical <5-employee roofing companymodeled from $13.50/$100 payroll (2024 filed)

Required once you have three or more employees regularly employed in the same business or establishment.

Pays medical care and lost wages when an employee is hurt working. Roofing is treated as construction work in states with construction-industry carve-ins, which apply a lower employee threshold — Missouri's construction-employer rule names roofers by trade, and Florida reaches one-employee crews. Falls are the leading cause of work-related injuries and deaths among roofers — the crew works at height all day, which is why roofing sits among the highest-rate workers' comp classes.

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

A principal or intermediate contractor that sublets work without obtaining a certificate of the subcontractor's workers'-compensation coverage becomes liable for injuries to the subcontractor's employees — even if that subcontractor has fewer than three employees — so general contractors routinely require subs of any size to carry coverage.

Source: N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-2(1), Workers' Compensation Act (North Carolina General Assembly)

Required in specific situations

Liability and property-damage protection for the trucks that haul crews, shingles, and tear-off debris to job sites.

Required if…

North Carolina requires motor vehicle liability insurance with minimum limits of $50,000 for bodily injury per person, $100,000 for bodily injury per accident, and $50,000 for property damage per accident (50/100/50), effective for policies issued or renewed on or after July 1, 2025.

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 a roofing contractor, the trucks that carry crews, materials, and ladders to customer job sites. The trade runs on trucks — crews, shingle pallets, and tear-off debris move to and from a different customer's roof job after job.

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: North Carolina General Statutes § 20-279.21(b)(2) — Motor Vehicle Safety and Financial Responsibility Act (NC General Assembly)

A licensing financial guarantee — not insurance for the business — some states require on file before issuing the license.

Required if…

North Carolina requires its statewide general contractor license for roofing projects costing $40,000 or more — roofing is covered through the licensing board's Building, Residential, or S(Roofing) specialty classifications — and attaches no surety bond to that license: applicants demonstrate working capital or net worth instead, with a surety bond ($175,000 to $1,000,000 by license limitation) available only as an elective alternative to the financial showing.

Required if your state's (or city's) licensing law conditions the roofing 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 roofing or contractor license on one — Illinois, for example, requires a continuous bond on file for its statewide roofing license — the license will not issue or renew without it; the amounts, and which states require one, vary by licensing law. Where the licensing board demands it, the bond is a gate on the license itself — a roofing 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: N.C.G.S. § 87-1(a) (Article 1, General Contractors), North Carolina General Assembly

Worth a look for this trade

Third-party injury and property damage — including water intrusion your completed roof causes after the crew has left.

Worth a look

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 roofer exposure, since a roof failure lets water into the customer's building long after the job closes. Oklahoma, for example, conditions its statewide roofing-contractor registration on this policy ($500,000 for residential work, $1,000,000 for commercial). A roofer's biggest exposure survives the job: a roof that leaks soaks the building below it months 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 the ladders, nail guns, and compressors that live on the truck and the job site.

Worth a look

Inland marine insures movable business property — contractor equipment and property in transit — wherever the work is. For a roofer that means the ladders, hoists, nail guns, and compressors riding between job sites and staged on open roofs rather than at a fixed premises. A roofer's equipment lives on the truck and the open job site — inland marine is the property line built to follow it.

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 roofing businesses that sell design input, consulting, or planning beyond the installation itself.

Worth a look

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 a roofing contractor that means the professional side of the trade: roof-system design input, consulting, and construction planning. It is a separate exposure from the jobsite bodily injury and property damage that general liability addresses. A roofer who advises — design input, system consulting, construction planning — 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 roofing company in North Carolina runs modeled $7.5k–$30k/yr in workers’ comp. More benchmarks are on the way to this chart.

Workers’ compCommercial auto · benchmark comingContractor license bond · benchmark comingGeneral liability · benchmark comingTools & equipment · benchmark comingProfessional liability · benchmark coming

bar height = modeled annual cost · tap a bar for that size’s range

$12k
$48k
$110k
$310k
$650k
<5 emp
5–9 emp
10–19 emp
20–49 emp
50–99 emp
A <5-employee NC roofing company: modeled $7.5k–$30k/yr in workers’-comp premium, before experience mods and schedule credits.

Modeled from the $13.50/$100 payroll filed rate (2024) and each band's own observed payroll (CBP 2023). Illustrative — not a quote.

Modeled annual premiums by business size — not quotes.
Size bandWorkers’ comp, modeled $/yr
<5 employees$12k
5–9 employees$48k
10–19 employees$110k
20–49 employees$310k
50–99 employees$650k

How North Carolina 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 a roofing company actually needs depends on its operations, contracts, and carrier.

  • N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-2(1), Workers' Compensation Act (North Carolina General Assembly) — as of Statute text as amended through S.L. 2021-78 (latest session law cited in G.S. 97-2; no page-stated currency date)
  • OSHA Publication 3755 — Protecting Roofing Workers — as of OSHA 3755-05 2015
  • Missouri Division of Workers' Compensation — construction-industry employer FAQ
  • Florida Statutes § 440.02 (2024) — Florida Senate — as of 2024 statutes
  • NAIC — Small Business Insurance
  • North Carolina General Statutes § 20-279.21(b)(2) — Motor Vehicle Safety and Financial Responsibility Act (NC General Assembly) — as of statute as amended through S.L. 2025-4; 50/100/50 limits effective 2025-07-01
  • NAIC — Auto Insurance topic — as of 2025-09-26
  • Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial property insurance guide
  • N.C.G.S. § 87-1(a) (Article 1, General Contractors), North Carolina General Assembly
  • Illinois General Assembly — Illinois Roofing Industry Licensing Act, 225 ILCS 335/3 (Application for roofing contractor license)
  • Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial general liability insurance
  • Oklahoma Roofing Contractor Registration Act, 59 O.S. § 1151.5 — Construction Industries Board official compilation — as of § 1151.5 last amended eff. 2015-08-21 (compilation as fetched)
  • 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 (Roofing contractors (NAICS 238160)) — as of 2023

Sources retrieved 2026-06-04 – 2026-06-11.

Stay informed

We’ll notify you when we’re ready to benchmark every coverage on this page.

No spam — one email.