Elevator Contractors Insurance Requirements in Illinois
What Illinois property managers should require from elevator contractors vendors
If you manage properties in Illinois and hire elevator contractors contractors, verifying their insurance coverage is not optional. Illinois law requires workers compensation for employers with 1+ employees, and commercial property owners are expected to verify adequate general liability coverage before allowing any contractor on site.
Illinois-Specific Note
Chicago's elevator market is the third largest in the US. The Illinois Elevator Safety Act provides statewide regulation, but Chicago maintains additional requirements. Elevator modernization in older Chicago buildings is a significant market with unique liability challenges.
Elevator Contractors Insurance Requirements in Illinois
| Coverage Type | Recommended Minimum |
|---|---|
General Liability | $2,000,000 / $5,000,000 |
Workers Compensation | Required (1+ employees) |
Commercial General Liability | $2,000,000 / $5,000,000 |
Workers' Compensation | Statutory limits |
Umbrella / Excess Liability | $5,000,000 |
Professional Liability (E&O) | $2,000,000 |
Pollution Liability | $500,000 |
Illinois-Specific Risks for Elevator Contractors
Required Endorsements in Illinois
- Completed operations — long-tail
- Professional liability — elevator system design
- Products liability endorsement
National Guide
Elevator Contractors Insurance Requirements
State Guide
Illinois Insurance Requirements
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do elevator contractors need the highest insurance limits?▼
How do I verify an elevator contractor's qualifications?▼
What is the difference between a full-service elevator contract and a maintenance-only contract?▼
Should I require professional liability from an elevator maintenance contractor?▼
Do elevator contractors in Illinois need a license?▼
What happens if my elevator contractors's insurance expires in Illinois?▼
Track Elevator Contractors COIs in Illinois Automatically
Upload a elevator contractors's certificate, and COIPulse checks it against Illinois requirements instantly. No spreadsheets, no manual verification.