Openai/696fdef5-57b4-8007-a615-95e462a36140
This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]
gpt-5-2[edit | edit source]
User: Understanding how insurance works for hotshot and trailer.[edit | edit source]
Understanding how insurance works for hotshot and trailer. CDL, non-CDL, MC, no MC, someone else’s MC number, ETC.
Assistant: Below is a plain-English, practical breakdown of how insurance works for hotshot trucking, covering CDL vs non-CDL, MC …[edit | edit source]
Below is a plain-English, practical breakdown of how insurance works for hotshot trucking, covering CDL vs non-CDL, MC vs no MC, and using someone else’s MC number. I’ll organize it the same way underwriters and DOT look at it.
1. First: the 3 things insurance is tied to[edit | edit source]
Insurance is not just about the truck. It’s tied to:
- Who you are legally operating as
- How much weight you haul
- Whose authority (MC number) you are running under
If any one of those changes, the insurance requirements change.
2. CDL vs Non-CDL (Hotshot-specific)[edit | edit source]
🚚 Non-CDL Hotshot[edit | edit source]
Applies when:
- Truck + trailer + cargo ≤ 26,000 lbs GVWR
- Trailer ≤ 10,000 lbs GVWR
- Typical setup: ¾-ton or 1-ton pickup + smaller trailer
Insurance required (minimum):
- Auto Liability (usually $1M if you have an MC)
- Physical Damage (if financed or desired)
- Cargo Insurance (usually $100k, depends on broker)
Key point: Non-CDL does NOT mean “less insurance” if you have an MC number.
🚛 CDL Hotshot[edit | edit source]
Applies when:
- Combined GVWR over 26,000 lbs, OR
- Trailer over 10,000 lbs GVWR
Insurance impact:
- Higher premiums
- Underwriters scrutinize experience more
- Same types of coverage, but stricter approval
3. MC Number vs No MC Number[edit | edit source]
✅ With Your Own MC Number (Operating Authority)[edit | edit source]
You are a for-hire motor carrier.
Insurance required by law:
- $750,000 minimum auto liability (most brokers require $1M)
- Cargo insurance (not federal law, but market-required)
- Filed with FMCSA (BMC-91X, BMC-34)
You are responsible for:
- Claims
- Compliance
- Audits
- Insurance staying active
This is the most expensive but most independent setup.
❌ No MC Number[edit | edit source]
You are not legally allowed to haul freight for the public unless:
- You are private carrier (your own goods), OR
- You run under someone else’s MC number
No MC = no direct freight contracts.
4. Using Someone Else’s MC Number (Very Common)[edit | edit source]
This is called:
- Leasing on
- Running under authority
- Being under dispatch / carrier authority
How insurance works here:[edit | edit source]
You do NOT carry your own motor carrier policy.
Instead:
- The carrier’s insurance covers liability
- You are listed as: - A driver, and/or - A scheduled vehicle
You typically still need:
- Non-trucking liability (bobtail)
- Physical Damage (often required)
- Sometimes occupational accident insurance
Pros:[edit | edit source]
- Lower insurance cost
- Easier entry
- No DOT audit stress
Cons:[edit | edit source]
- Less control
- Carrier deducts insurance weekly
- Claims affect the carrier’s loss history
⚠️ Critical warning: If someone says “just use my MC but keep your own insurance” — that is often illegal or non-compliant unless structured correctly.
5. Hotshot + Trailer: Who insures what?[edit | edit source]
Truck[edit | edit source]
- Covered under: - Your policy (if you have MC), OR - Carrier’s policy (if leased on)
Trailer[edit | edit source]
One of three ways:
- Covered under your policy
- Covered under carrier’s policy
- Listed separately as “trailer interchange”
⚠️ If you pull someone else’s trailer, this must be explicitly covered.
6. Cargo Insurance (where people get burned)[edit | edit source]
Cargo coverage depends on:
- Authority holder (MC owner)
- Type of freight
- Broker contract
Typical requirements:
- $100,000 general freight
- Higher for: - Vehicles - Hazmat - Expedited - High-value loads
If leased on:
- Carrier’s cargo policy applies
- Deductibles can be $1,000–$5,000
7. Common Scenarios (Quick Table)[edit | edit source]
| Scenario | MC? | CDL? | Whose Insurance? | | ------------------------------ | ------------ | -------------- | -------------------- | | Owner-op hotshot, independent | Yes | CDL or non-CDL | Yours | | Leased to carrier | No | CDL or non-CDL | Carrier | | Private hauling own goods | No | Depends | Commercial auto only | | “Using friend’s MC casually” | Yes (theirs) | Any | ❌ Usually illegal | | Dispatcher only (no authority) | No | N/A | Carrier |
8. Red Flags to Avoid 🚩[edit | edit source]
- Running loads under an MC you’re not leased to
- Insurance not filed with FMCSA
- Cargo exclusions you didn’t read
- Trailer not listed on policy
- “1099 driver” but treated like carrier
9. Bottom Line (Plain Truth)[edit | edit source]
- Insurance follows the MC number
- CDL vs non-CDL affects eligibility and cost, not legality
- Leasing on is the safest entry for new hotshot drivers
- Most violations happen due to authority misuse, not driving
If you want, I can:
- Build a decision tree (“If this, then that”)
- Create a one-page insurance cheat sheet
- Review a specific scenario you’re considering
- Explain cost ranges for each setup
Just tell me how deep you want to go.
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ "Hotshot Insurance Breakdown". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2026-01-21.