Debris Removal Business Insurance Cost & Quotes (2026)


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Debris removal insurance costs $2,470 to $14,990 annually for a $500K operation. That six-fold gap comes down to one thing most contractors never think to ask about: how your state classifies what’s inside the load.
Carriers price debris removal off disposal documentation first, not driving records or claim history. Contractors who can show manifested loads going to certified facilities unlock rates that contractors without paperwork never see, regardless of their safety record.
Class code 91629 covers construction site debris removal, but that classification assumes you’re hauling inert materials to approved facilities. The moment you touch storm debris with potential contaminants, demolition waste with lead paint, or anything requiring special handling, underwriters start adding exclusions or walking away entirely.
The state gap is real:
- Virginia: $2,470 for $500K operations (0.5% of revenue)
- California: $3,770 (0.75% of revenue)
- Pennsylvania: $14,990 (3.0% of revenue)
- Illinois: $11,430 (2.3% of revenue)
Pennsylvania’s rate isn’t a penalty for bad contractors. It reflects stricter environmental liability requirements baked into standard GL policies there.
Where the savings actually come from: Our 200+ quote analysis shows 30% to 60% premium reductions for contractors who document three things: disposal facility contracts, load manifests, and equipment maintenance logs. Florida showed the widest spread, with a $9,500 gap between contractors who had documentation and those who didn’t.
Before comparing costs, understand what debris removal insurance actually covers. Contractors doing crossover work should also review tree service insurance and excavation insurance classifications.
- Debris Removal General Liability Insurance Rates
- Debris Removal Insurance Cost By State
- Interactive State Grid
- Complete State Comparison Table
- View Costs by Your Revenue Level
- Side-by-Side State Comparison Tool
- Regional Insurance Cost Overview
- Arizona
- What Does Debris Removal Liability Insurance Cover?
- How to Lower Your Debris Removal Insurance Cost
- Methodology
These benchmarks come from ContractorNerd’s analysis of debris removal insurance quotes. See methodology
General Liability Premium Ranges:

National Average
0.5% to 6.8% of annual revenue

Favorable Markets
0.5% to 1.0% of annual revenue

Potential Savings
30% to 60% of current GL premium possible when moving from average to favorable market rates
Workers’ Compensation Rates
Class 91629
Debris Removal
Rate varies significantly by state
Six Major Cost Drivers

Classification Codes
GL code 91629 sets your base rate for construction site debris removal. Hauling materials that trigger environmental classifications bumps you into higher-rated codes or adds exclusions.

Years in Business
Primarily affects GL rates. Debris removal contractors with 5+ years of documented disposal relationships typically pay less than newer operations without established facility contracts.

Subcontractor Usage
Usage Impacts both GL (uninsured sub exposure) and WC (payroll audits). Using day laborers without certificates of insurance is the fastest way to see your premium spike at audit.

Business Size
scales with revenue. WC scales with payroll. Operations running lean crews with newer equipment benefit from better ratios than those with aging fleets and high turnover.

Claims History
GL claims affect rates for 3-5 years. WC claims impact your experience modification factor. One rollover or load-shift accident can follow you for years.

Geographic Location
Creates 500%+ GL variation alone. Virginia charges 0.5% of revenue for $500K operations while Pennsylvania charges 3.0%. That’s $12,500 difference for identical businesses.
Debris Removal General Liability Insurance Rates
Construction Site Debris Removal (GL Code 91629)
Most debris removal contractors perform construction site cleanup, hauling inert materials to approved disposal facilities. This classification covers standard debris hauling and site clearing with rates varying based on disposal documentation and material types handled.
Revenue Level
National Average
Favorable Rate
Potential Savings
High % of Revenue
$50,000
$1,540
$950
38%
1.9% to 3.1%
$150,000
$2,850
$1,380
52%
0.9% to 1.9%
$500,000
$6,720
$2,470
63%
0.5% to 1.3%
*Potential savings represent the possible reduction when moving from average to favorable market rates
Debris removal contractors typically classify under 91629 with rates varying dramatically by state. Those performing work involving hazardous materials handling or environmental remediation may have split classifications under different codes.
Debris Removal Insurance Cost By State
Most debris removal contractors operate across both residential cleanouts and commercial construction site work. The data below reflects a typical blend of these operations, with rates varying based on disposal documentation and the specific types of materials handled.
Explore different ways to view debris removal insurance costs across states. Click each layout option below to see your data presented in different formats.
Arizona
| $50K Annual Revenue | $1,540 |
| $150K Annual Revenue | $2,710 |
| $500K Annual Revenue | $6,720 |
| Favorable Premium ($50K) | $1,120 |
| Higher-End Premium ($50K) | $1,960 |
| Maximum Savings | $3,510 (52%) |
The numbers that matter:
Lowest cost markets:
- Virginia: $960 to $2,470 across revenue tiers, with zero variation between carriers. This is the most stable, predictable market for debris removal coverage.
- California: $950 to $3,770 with up to $1,300 (34%) savings available through shopping.
Highest cost markets:
- Pennsylvania: $2,820 to $14,990, the most expensive state by far. A $500K operation here pays six times what the same business pays in Virginia.
- Illinois: $2,580 to $11,430 with $6,630 (58%) potential savings, making it the second most expensive but with significant room to negotiate.
Best shopping opportunities:
- Florida: 60% potential savings ($4,750 at $500K revenue)
- Illinois: 58% potential savings ($6,630 at $500K revenue)
- Arizona: 52% potential savings ($3,510 at $500K revenue)
- Texas: 51% potential savings ($3,450 at $500K revenue)
Worst shopping opportunities:
- Pennsylvania: 30% spread, but the base rates are so high that 30% still equals $4,440
- Virginia: 0% variation. Carriers price identically here.
- Michigan: 30% spread
What Does Debris Removal Liability Insurance Cover?
Understanding GL Limit Structures
Your limit requirements depend on where your loads end up. Residential cleanout customers rarely ask for certificates. General contractors and municipal contracts always do.
$500K
Per Occurrence
$1M Limits
Aggregate

Suitable for smaller residential cleanout work

Won’t get you on a commercial construction site

Base rate pricing, but limits your job options
$1M
Per Occurrence
$2M Limits
Aggregate

Standard for GC subcontract work and commercial sites

Required by most disposal facilities for contractor accounts

No premium increase over $500K in most states. There’s no reason to carry less.
$2M
Per Occurrence
$4M Limits
Aggregate

Municipal contracts, DOT work, and large commercial demo projects

Storm debris contracts often require this minimum

Usually structured as $1M primary plus $1M umbrella to reduce cost
Deductible Strategies
Debris removal claims tend to be binary: either nothing happens or something expensive happens. Fender benders at disposal sites, third-party property damage from dropped loads, environmental contamination allegations. Small claims are rare.
$0 Deductible

Makes sense if you’re running thin margins and can’t float $2,500 on a surprise claim

Carriers assume you’ll file more claims, so you pay for that assumption

New operations without cash reserves should start here
$2,500 Deductible

Filters out the rare small claim while keeping you covered for the $50K+ scenarios

Typical savings: 5-10% on GL premium

Requires keeping $2,500 accessible for claim response, not tied up in equipment payments
Specialized Debris Removal Endorsements

Pollution Liability Coverage
Available as a GL endorsement or standalone policy, this coverage addresses allegations of environmental contamination from hauled materials, dust migration, or improper disposal. Critical for contractors handling demolition debris, storm cleanup, or any materials with potential contaminants like lead paint or asbestos.

Tools & Equipment Coverage
While often available as a GL endorsement for hand tools, contractors with significant equipment investments should consider separate inland marine policies. Debris removal operators running loaders, skid steers, grapple trucks, and roll-off containers typically need substantial equipment coverage beyond basic tool protection.
How to Lower Your Debris Removal Insurance Cost
Strategic Shopping Timeline

Your Truck Schedule Is Your Application
Forget the standard renewal timeline advice. For debris removal, your quote lives or dies on your vehicle list. Carriers want year, make, model, VIN, GVW, and radius for every truck before they’ll quote. Pull this together 90 days out. Missing one truck or having outdated driver MVRs delays everything.

Commercial Auto Drives the Deal
Most debris removal contractors focus on GL when shopping. That’s backwards. Your commercial auto is likely your largest line item. Find a carrier competitive on auto first, then see if they’ll package GL. Shopping GL alone while ignoring auto leaves money on the table.
Workers’ Compensation Optimization Strategies

The Driver vs. Laborer Split
Your WC rate depends on what your people actually do. A driver who stays in the cab has different exposure than the guy throwing debris into the truck. If you can document that split through time records, you may qualify for blended rates instead of everyone getting the highest classification.

Overtime Kills You Twice
You pay overtime wages, then you pay WC premium on those overtime wages. Except you shouldn’t. Overtime premium (the extra half) is excludable from WC calculations in most states. If your auditor is calculating WC on gross payroll including overtime premium, you’re overpaying. Fix this before your next audit.

Back Injuries Are Your Mod Problem
The most common debris removal WC claim is a back strain from lifting. These rarely cost much in medical bills, but they rack up lost time that destroys your mod. Having light duty available, even if it’s just answering phones, keeps injured workers on payroll instead of collecting benefits.

Your Mod Has a Memory
Bad claims from three years ago are still hurting you. But they roll off. Know when your worst year drops out of the calculation and time your shopping to hit right after. A 1.15 mod dropping to 0.95 is a 17% instant savings.
General Liability Cost Reduction

Disposal Documentation Is Underwriting Gold
Carriers assume the worst about debris removal contractors: illegal dumping, unknown hazardous materials, no paper trail. Showing up with disposal facility contracts, sample manifests, and a list of approved sites tells a different story. This isn’t about safety theater. It’s proof you’re not the contractor they’re worried about.

Photograph Everything
Debris removal GL claims are almost always property damage disputes. Did you crack that driveway or was it already cracked? Your word against theirs. Timestamped photos before loading and after delivery end these arguments. Carriers can’t discount you for this upfront, but zero disputed claims at renewal gets you preferred treatment.

Day Laborers Are Premium Grenades
Picking up workers outside Home Depot and putting them on a jobsite without coverage is common in debris removal. It’s also the fastest way to blow up your renewal. One injury, one claim, and you’re explaining to underwriters why you had uninsured workers. Get certificates or add them to your payroll. No middle ground.

Your Routes Matter More Than Your Revenue
A $500K debris removal operation hauling within one county is a different risk than a $500K operation crossing state lines. Carriers price radius. If you’re currently rated for 500-mile radius but actually operate within 50 miles, you’re overpaying. Tighten your radius documentation.
Methodology
Data Source
These cost benchmarks reflect ContractorNerd’s analysis of over 200 debris removal and hauling insurance quotes across 11 major markets. As a licensed insurance agency, we work with carriers who specifically understand the risks of construction cleanup, junk removal, and waste hauling operations.
What the Numbers Represent
- General liability premiums: Actual quotes for debris removal contractor classification
- Revenue-based tiers: Showing how premiums scale from single-truck to fleet operations
- Market variations: Why rates differ significantly between states for identical operations
Business Assumptions
- $50K revenue: 1 owner-operator with single dump trailer or truck, primarily residential cleanouts
- $150K revenue: 1 owner + 1 helper, established commercial accounts with GCs, proper waste manifesting
- $500K revenue: Small fleet operation, multiple disposal relationships, dumpster rental services, documented safety program
Risk Factors Unique to Debris Removal
Insurance carriers consider these trade-specific exposures:
- Loading/unloading hazards: Heavy lifting injuries, falling debris, equipment damage
- Vehicle operations: Higher-than-average commercial auto exposure due to frequent hauling
- Property damage: Damage to driveways, landscaping, structures during pickup
- Waste handling: Disposal of hazardous materials, improper manifesting
- Third-party property: Damage at landfills, transfer stations, customer sites
Classification Considerations
Your specific classification matters significantly. Pure construction debris hauling rates differently than estate cleanout services or hazmat-adjacent waste removal. Carriers assess what you’re hauling, not just that you’re hauling it.
Limitations
These rates assume standard construction debris and residential junk removal. Operations involving asbestos, lead paint, medical waste, or hazardous materials require specialized coverage at substantially higher rates. Get quotes specific to your waste streams.









