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What Is a Certificate of Insurance? A Contractor's Complete Guide

GCs, permit offices, and property owners will ask for your COI constantly. Here's exactly what it is, what every section means, and how to make sure yours says what it needs to say.

Every contractor gets asked for a certificate of insurance — usually right before a job starts or when pulling a permit. Most contractors know they need one, but fewer understand what the document actually is, what each section means, and — critically — what the COI cannot do that contractors sometimes assume it can.

This guide walks through the ACORD 25 certificate form, explains each section in plain English, covers what California GCs typically require, and explains the most important misconception about COIs: they are evidence of insurance, not the insurance itself.

What a COI Is — and What It Isn't

A certificate of insurance (COI) is a standardized one-page summary of your active insurance policies. The industry-standard form is the ACORD 25 — "ACORD" stands for Association for Cooperative Operations Research and Development, the nonprofit that develops standard insurance forms.

The COI documents:

Critical point: A COI is evidence that a policy exists. It is not the policy. It cannot create, expand, or modify coverage. Whatever appears on the COI must be backed by an actual endorsement or provision in the underlying policy. If the policy doesn't have it, the COI doesn't make it real.

Walking Through the ACORD 25 Form

Producer Section (Top Left)

This is your insurance broker's information — name, address, phone, email. The producer (broker) is the one who issues the certificate on behalf of the carrier. If you need a COI, you contact your broker, not the carrier directly.

Insured Section

This is your business information — the named insured on the policy. The name here must match the name on your CSLB license and your policies exactly. Mismatches between "Smith Plumbing" and "Smith Plumbing, Inc." can create coverage disputes.

Insurer Section

Lists the insurance companies providing each line of coverage, identified by letter (Insurer A, B, C, etc.). Each insurer is also shown with their NAIC number — a federal ID for insurance carriers that lets you verify they're licensed in California.

General Liability Section

This is the section GCs scrutinize most carefully. It shows:

Auto Liability Section

If you carry commercial auto, it appears here showing the combined single limit (CSL) or split limits. Most GCs require at least $1M CSL. The form also indicates whether coverage is for any auto, owned autos only, hired autos, or non-owned autos.

Workers Compensation / Employers Liability Section

Shows workers comp coverage (statutory — meaning at California's required limits) and the employers liability limits (typically $1M per accident / $1M policy limit / $1M per disease). If you're a sole proprietor with an exclusion, this section will reflect the owner exclusion.

Description of Operations / Additional Insured Box

This is where endorsements and special provisions are noted. If you've added a GC as additional insured with CG 20 10 and CG 20 37, it should appear here. Primary and non-contributory language, waiver of subrogation, and 30-day cancellation notice provisions are also listed here.

Certificate Holder

The entity receiving the certificate — the GC, property owner, or permit office. The certificate holder is not automatically an additional insured just because they're named in this box. Additional insured status requires a separate endorsement.

What California GCs Typically Require on a COI

While requirements vary by GC and project, here's what you'll encounter on most California construction projects:

Coverage Typical Minimum Requirement Notes
General Liability $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate Commercial projects often require $2M per occurrence
Workers Compensation Statutory (CA limits) Required even for sole props on many projects
Employers Liability $1M / $1M / $1M Included in WC policy
Commercial Auto $1M CSL Any auto including hired/non-owned
Additional Insured CG 20 10 + CG 20 37 Ongoing and completed operations
Primary/Non-Contributory Required on GL Must be added by endorsement
Waiver of Subrogation Required on GL and WC Must be in place before a loss
Cancellation Notice 30 days (10 days non-payment) Some GCs require 30-day notice on all cancellations

City and Permit Office Requirements in California

Many California cities require a COI before issuing a building permit. Here's the general pattern:

What Happens When Coverage Lapses

When your insurance policy cancels or lapses — whether for non-payment, mid-term cancellation, or policy expiration — the carrier is required to notify the certificate holders on file. This triggers several immediate consequences:

Tip: Set calendar reminders 45 days before your policy renewal date. This gives you enough time to shop coverage, address any issues, and ensure continuous coverage without a gap. A lapse — even a brief one — creates real problems.

The Most Common COI Mistakes Contractors Make

After years of working with California contractors, here are the mistakes we see most often:

  1. Issuing a COI that lists coverage the policy doesn't have. If your policy doesn't have a primary/non-contributory endorsement, your COI can't say it does. Issuing a fraudulent certificate can be grounds for policy cancellation and creates personal liability.
  2. Assuming the certificate holder is automatically an additional insured. The certificate holder box and the additional insured endorsement are different things. Being listed as certificate holder does not grant AI status.
  3. Not matching the legal entity name. "Smith Construction" and "Smith Construction LLC" are different legal entities. The GC may require coverage in a specific entity name. Make sure your policy and COI use the correct legal name.
  4. Letting policies lapse and using old COIs. A COI from an expired policy is worthless. Some contractors have mistakenly presented outdated COIs. If your carrier audits or a claim arises, the lapse will be discovered and coverage denied.
  5. Not reading the subcontract insurance requirements carefully. Many contractors sign contracts with insurance requirements their current policy doesn't meet. Send us the contract before you sign — we'll tell you whether your coverage complies.

How to Get a COI

Getting a COI is straightforward when you have active coverage. Contact your broker with:

We can issue and deliver most COIs electronically within the same business day. For new projects with specific GC requirements we haven't handled before, we first verify the endorsements are in place before issuing the certificate — ensuring what the COI says matches what your policy actually provides.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a certificate of insurance (COI)?

A COI is a one-page ACORD 25 form that summarizes your active insurance coverage — carrier names, policy numbers, coverage types, limits, and expiration dates. It's evidence that a policy exists, not the policy itself. It's issued by your insurance broker and sent to anyone who needs proof of your coverage.

How do I get a certificate of insurance same day?

Contact your insurance broker with the certificate holder's name and address, the additional insured requirements (if any), and where to send the COI. We can typically issue and deliver a COI electronically within the same business day. For GC requirements with specific endorsements, we first verify the endorsements are in place before issuing.

Can a COI create coverage that doesn't exist in the policy?

No. A COI is evidence of insurance — it documents what the policy provides. It cannot create or expand coverage beyond what the actual policy contains. If a COI states primary and non-contributory coverage but the policy doesn't have that endorsement, the coverage doesn't exist. The carrier will look at the policy, not the COI, when a claim is made.

What happens when my insurance lapses?

When coverage lapses, the carrier notifies all certificate holders on file. The GC or project owner can immediately remove you from the job. CSLB monitors insurance status for licensed contractors. Working with a lapsed policy can result in CSLB license suspension, project removal, and personal liability for any claims during the lapse period.

Do California cities require a COI for building permits?

Many California cities and counties require a COI showing minimum GL coverage before issuing a building permit. Requirements vary by jurisdiction. In San Diego, Los Angeles, and other major metro areas, contractors must provide a COI to the building department. Some jurisdictions also require the city to be listed as additional insured on your policy.

What GL limits do most California GCs require on a COI?

The most common California GC requirement is $1,000,000 per occurrence / $2,000,000 aggregate for general liability. Commercial projects and public works often require higher limits — $2M per occurrence is not uncommon. Many GC contracts also require the products and completed operations aggregate to be separate from the general aggregate.

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