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General Contractors Insurance Requirements in Texas

What Texas property managers should require from general contractors vendors

GL Minimum: $1,000,000/$2,000,000TX override
Workers Comp: Not required

If you manage properties in Texas and hire general contractors contractors, verifying their insurance coverage is not optional. Texas law requires workers compensation in certain circumstances, and commercial property owners are expected to verify adequate general liability coverage before allowing any contractor on site.

Texas-Specific Note

Texas is unique in having no state GC license requirement and optional WC. This combination creates risk for property managers — verify all insurance directly. The RCLA (Residential Construction Liability Act) governs defect claims with a 60-day notice/cure period.

General Contractors Insurance Requirements in Texas

Coverage TypeRecommended Minimum
General Liability
$1,000,000 / $2,000,000
Workers Compensation
Varies
Commercial General Liability
$2,000,000 / $4,000,000
Workers' Compensation
Statutory limits
Umbrella / Excess Liability
$2,000,000
Builder's Risk
Full project value
Professional Liability (E&O)
$1,000,000

Texas-Specific Risks for General Contractors

Hail and tornado damage during construction
Extreme heat — worker safety liability
Foundation movement from expansive clay soil
No state licensing creates subcontractor quality risk

Required Endorsements in Texas

National Guide

General Contractors Insurance Requirements

State Guide

Texas Insurance Requirements

Frequently Asked Questions

What insurance should I require from a general contractor's subcontractors?
Every subcontractor should carry their own GL ($1M/$2M minimum), workers' compensation (statutory limits), and commercial auto ($1M CSL). The GC should collect and maintain COIs from all subs before they begin work. Do not rely solely on the GC's policy to cover subcontractor claims — if a sub is uninsured, the claim may flow up to the GC's policy, depleting coverage available for other claims.
What is a per-project aggregate endorsement and when do I need it?
A per-project aggregate endorsement ensures that the GC's full aggregate limit applies separately to each project, rather than being shared across all projects the GC is working on simultaneously. Without this endorsement, claims on other projects could deplete the aggregate limit available for your project. Require this endorsement whenever the GC is working on multiple projects concurrently.
How do I protect against construction defect claims after the project is done?
Require the GC to maintain completed operations coverage for a minimum of 3–5 years after project completion (10 years in states with longer statutes of repose). Verify that your additional insured status extends to completed operations via CG 20 37. Include contractual indemnification provisions and a requirement that the GC notify you if completed operations coverage is cancelled or non-renewed.
Should I require the GC to carry professional liability insurance?
Yes, if the GC is providing any design-build services, construction management, or project management consulting. Standard general liability policies exclude professional services — meaning design errors, specification mistakes, or project management failures would not be covered. A $1M professional liability (E&O) policy is the minimum for most commercial projects.
Do general contractors in Texas need a license?
Texas does not require a state GC license. However, most cities require local registration. TRCC (Texas Residential Construction Commission) was abolished in 2010. Verify local requirements per municipality.
What happens if my general contractors's insurance expires in Texas?
In Texas, you as the property manager could be held liable for injuries or damages caused by an uninsured general contractors on your property. Texas courts have consistently ruled that property owners have a duty to verify contractor insurance before allowing work to begin.

Track General Contractors COIs in Texas Automatically

Upload a general contractors's certificate, and COIPulse checks it against Texas requirements instantly. No spreadsheets, no manual verification.