If you're a roofing contractor in California, you already know: your insurance costs more than almost every other trade. A lot more. General liability premiums that run $1,500/year for a painter or $2,000 for a tile installer can easily run $8,000–$20,000 or more for a roofing contractor doing comparable revenue. Workers comp premiums are even more dramatic — roofing carries one of the highest class code rates in the entire WCIRB manual.
The reasons are real and not arbitrary. Falls are the leading cause of death in the California construction industry, and roofing puts workers at height on a daily basis. The California Division of Occupational Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA) tracks roofing fall fatalities every year, and insurance carriers price their policies accordingly. This guide breaks down exactly what you should expect to pay, what factors move your premium up or down, and what to do if you've been declined.
Section 1: Why Roofing Contractors Pay More Than Other Trades
Insurance pricing comes down to claims data, and the claims data for roofing is unambiguous. Here's what drives your cost higher than other trades:
WCIRB Class Code 5551
California uses the Workers' Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau (WCIRB) to set base rates for workers comp by job classification. Roofing falls under class code 5551 — one of the highest-rated codes in the system. Base rates of $18–$28 per $100 of payroll are standard, compared to $3–$8 for lower-risk trades. With even a small crew, this translates to dramatic premium differences.
Fall Protection Requirements and Exposure
Cal/OSHA Title 8, Section 1671 governs fall protection for roofing work. Workers on roofs with slopes exceeding 4:12 require specific fall protection systems. The enforcement environment is strict in California, and carriers know that even compliant contractors face elevated fall risk simply by virtue of working at height. This exposure is priced into every roofing policy.
Torch-Applied Work Surcharges
If you perform torch-applied (hot mop) roofing for modified bitumen systems, expect a surcharge on your general liability premium — typically 20–40% above the base rate. Some carriers exclude torch work entirely. The fire exposure created by open-flame application work on rooftops is a meaningful underwriting concern, especially in California's wildfire environment.
Admitted Carriers Have Left the Market
Many admitted (state-regulated) insurance carriers have reduced or eliminated their appetite for roofing contractors entirely. This forces roofing contractors into the Excess and Surplus (E&S) lines market, where rates are typically higher because carriers aren't subject to the same rate filing requirements. Working with a broker who has E&S market access and specific roofing programs is essential.
Section 2: General Liability Costs by Business Size
The table below reflects realistic 2025 market rates for California roofing contractors seeking $1M/$2M GL coverage. Your actual rate depends on annual revenue, claims history, specific operations, and the markets your broker can access.
| Business Size | Annual Revenue | GL Premium Range | Key Drivers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sole Proprietor | Under $500K | $4,000 – $8,000 | Operations type, no claims history |
| Small Crew (2–5) | $500K – $1.5M | $8,000 – $18,000 | Revenue, torch work, prior claims |
| Mid-Size (6–15) | $1.5M – $4M | $18,000 – $35,000 | Payroll, revenue, completed ops claims |
| Larger Operation (15+) | $4M+ | $35,000+ | Full underwriting review, loss runs required |
These ranges reflect the base GL policy at standard $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate limits. If a GC requires higher limits — say $2M per occurrence — or if you need completed operations coverage on a separate aggregate, your premium will be higher. Claims in the prior 5 years can push rates to the top of the range or beyond.
Section 3: Workers Comp Costs for Roofing Contractors
Workers compensation is where roofing costs truly diverge from other trades. Here's how the math works:
Class Code 5551 Base Rates
The WCIRB sets pure premium rates that carriers use as a starting point. For class code 5551 (roofing), base rates typically run $18–$28 per $100 of payroll. This means for every $100,000 in roofer payroll, you're looking at $18,000–$28,000 in workers comp premium before any experience modification is applied.
Real Example
A roofing contractor with $400,000 in annual payroll at a $22/$100 rate with a 1.0 experience mod pays approximately $88,000/year in workers comp premium. If that same contractor has a 1.25 X-mod (meaning 25% above average losses for their size), the premium rises to $110,000. A 0.85 X-mod (below average claims) would drop it to $74,800 — a $35,200 annual difference purely from the experience modification factor.
Experience Modification Factor Impact
Your X-mod is calculated by WCIRB based on your actual claims versus expected claims for your payroll size and class. For roofing contractors, even a single significant fall injury can push your X-mod up for three years. A claim with a $50,000 reserve can cost you far more than that in premium surcharges over the life of the modification.
Section 4: Commercial Auto Insurance for Roofers
Most roofing contractors operate pickups, vans, or flatbeds loaded with equipment, ladders, and materials. Your commercial auto exposure is significant:
- Base vehicle rate: $2,000–$5,000 per vehicle per year for $1M CSL coverage
- Ladder rack / equipment hauling: Some carriers add a surcharge for vehicles with ladder racks or that haul equipment regularly
- Driver MVR history: Moving violations and accidents on driver records push rates up significantly; a DUI in the last 5 years can make a driver uninsurable commercially
- Radius of operations: Driving primarily in a local area vs. statewide hauling affects rates
- Vehicle age and value: Newer vehicles cost more to insure; older high-mileage trucks may be difficult to insure at replacement value
If a GC requires $1M combined single limit (CSL) on auto liability, make sure your policy reflects that limit — many contractors carry only $500K and discover the gap when reading a subcontract.
Section 5: How to Lower Your Roofing Insurance Premium
You can't change the fact that roofing is a high-hazard trade, but you can meaningfully reduce what you pay through the following strategies:
Implement a Formal Safety Program
California requires all employers to have a written Injury and Illness Prevention Program (IIPP). Having one that's actually implemented — with documented toolbox talks, fall protection training records, and equipment inspection logs — signals to underwriters that you're proactively managing risk. Some carriers offer credits for documented safety programs.
Protect Your Experience Modification Factor
Every workers comp claim affects your X-mod. A return-to-work program that gets injured employees back on light duty quickly reduces the total cost of claims and the impact on your mod. Contesting inflated reserves and working with a claims advocate to close claims efficiently matters too.
Maintain Clean Motor Vehicle Records
Pull MVRs on all drivers annually and enforce a written MVR policy. Drivers with poor records should not be operating company vehicles. A clean fleet record keeps your commercial auto premium competitive.
Work With a Broker Who Has Dedicated Roofing Markets
Not every broker can place roofing contractors. Brokers with access to E&S markets, specialty roofing programs, and carrier relationships built around contractor risks get better rates and can get coverage when standard markets decline. This single factor can save thousands of dollars per year.
Consider Pay-As-You-Go Workers Comp
PAYGO workers comp bases premium on actual payroll each period. It eliminates large estimated deposits, removes the risk of a surprise audit bill, and helps cash flow — particularly useful for roofing contractors whose workload varies seasonally.
Section 6: What to Do If You've Been Declined
Being declined by a carrier doesn't mean you can't get coverage — it means you need a broker with the right market access. Here's the landscape:
Specialty roofing insurance programs exist specifically for contractors that admitted markets won't write. These programs aggregate roofing contractor volume to negotiate better rates and terms. Getting into the right program can make a significant difference in both price and coverage quality.
If you've been declined by multiple carriers, the key information we need to find you coverage includes: 5 years of loss runs, your current CSLB license, a description of the types of roofing you perform (residential, commercial, tile, shingle, TPO, torch-applied), and your current payroll and revenue figures. Call us at (858) 367-0782 and we'll tell you what we can do.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does general liability insurance cost for a roofing contractor in California?
California roofing GL insurance typically costs $4,000–$8,000/year for sole proprietors, $8,000–$18,000 for small crews, $18,000–$35,000 for mid-size operations, and $35,000+ for larger firms. Rates depend heavily on annual revenue, torch-applied work, claims history, and whether you work through admitted or E&S markets.
Why is roofing insurance so expensive in California?
Roofing carries the highest workers comp class code rates in construction (WCIRB 5551). Falls are the #1 cause of construction fatalities in California. Many admitted carriers have stopped writing roofing policies, pushing roofers into E&S markets with higher base rates. Torch-applied work adds fire risk surcharges on top of the base premium.
What is WCIRB class code 5551?
Class code 5551 is the California workers comp classification for roofing contractors. It carries base rates of approximately $18–$28 per $100 of payroll, making it one of the most expensive classifications in the WCIRB manual. This reflects the high frequency and severity of fall injuries in roofing work.
Does torch-applied roofing cost more to insure?
Yes. Torch-applied (hot mop) work adds a fire risk surcharge that can increase your GL premium significantly. Some carriers exclude torch work entirely. You need to disclose all torch operations when applying for coverage, and find a carrier with a roofing program that includes it.
Can I get roofing insurance if I've been declined by carriers?
Yes. Many admitted carriers decline roofing contractors, but robust Excess and Surplus (E&S) markets and specialty roofing insurance programs are available. Working with a broker who has access to non-admitted markets and roofing-specific programs is essential. We specialize in placing roofing contractors other brokers can't cover.
How can I lower my roofing insurance premium?
The most effective strategies are implementing a formal safety program, improving your experience modification factor through fewer claims, maintaining clean MVRs for your drivers, using pay-as-you-go workers comp to manage cash flow, and working with a broker who has dedicated roofing markets and can negotiate on your behalf.