Electrician Insurance Cost in Connecticut (2026) | Get Business Coverage

How much does electrician insurance cost in Connecticut? (2026)

Reviewed by Jason Wootton — licensed P&C Insurance Agent (NPN 7694718) Verify ↗
Edited by Justin Marks · Updated January 2026 · Disclosures ↓

Electrician insurance pricing in Connecticut is shaped by the same state-specific bureau loss-cost filings that govern every commercial policy issued in Connecticut. Below: the most-recent Connecticut filings affecting electrician operations, cited to their SERFF tracking numbers — primary-source, government-held pricing records. Read the full national context on the Electrician cost guide.

Recent rate-filing activity — 1 state filings across 1 commercial line

Commercial carriers can't charge whatever they want — each state's Department of Insurance must approve loss-cost filings before they take effect. These are primary-source, government-held records available on SERFF Filing Access. Cited below: the most-recent active filings affecting electrician operations, with the real SERFF tracking number for each.

Line State Overall change Effective SERFF tracking
WC CT Overall -3.8% voluntary loss cost decrease / -0.4% assigned risk decrease Jan 1, 2026 CTID-NCCI-2026-CT-WC

Source: SERFF Filing Access (filingaccess.serff.com) — the official public-records interface for state Department of Insurance filings. Loss-cost changes shown are the overall bureau-wide change in each state; the actual impact on your quote depends on your class code, payroll, experience modifier, and carrier-specific loss-cost multiplier (LCM). Get a quote for your exact numbers.

National context — Electrician insurance overview

The signature electrician claim is a fire — faulty wiring igniting a client's building — so general liability is the front line, and underwriters weigh your code discipline heavily. The claim that surfaces later is completed operations: a panel or wiring job that fails and starts a fire months or years after handover, which is why completed-operations coverage is the most important GL sub-line for electricians. And because the trade means electrocution, arc-flash burns, shock, and falls, workers' compensation is usually the single largest premium line.

As an industry-typical estimate, a small electrical operation runs roughly $1,500–$8,000+/year across general liability, tools & equipment (inland marine), commercial auto, and payroll-rated workers' compensation — more for commercial/industrial or high-voltage work. No insurance bureau publishes electrician premiums, so every dollar here is an estimate; each coverage fact is sourced to a named authority (III, IRMI, OSHA, NFPA, NCCI). Use the calculator below, then get a real quote in 5 minutes.

National benchmark figures

Published cost ranges for Electrician insurance — useful as a national baseline against which the Connecticut filings above signal local direction.

Electrical fire
$1.6B/yr U.S.
NFPA attributes ~31,650 home fires, 430 deaths, and $1.6B in property damage a year to electrical distribution & lighting equipment — the leading cause of home-fire property damage. NFPA
Completed operations
Fire after handover
A wiring job that ignites months or years after completion is a products-completed-operations claim — the critical electrician long-tail. IRMI products-completed operations
Electrocution
OSHA Focus Four
Electrocution is one of OSHA's four leading causes of construction fatalities; arc-flash and shock drive the workers'-comp line. OSHA Focus Four
Tools & equipment
Inland marine
Meters, drills, wire pullers, and generators are covered off the shop premises by an inland-marine equipment floater. III artisan contractors
Workers' comp class
NCCI 5190 / 5140
Most electricians rate under NCCI class 5190 (wiring within buildings); payroll × class rate is the biggest premium lever. NCCI experience rating

Industry-typical market ranges (national)

Sourced from III, NCCI, ISO, NAIC, BLS, FMCSA, FDA, NRA — government and bureau publications, not from our quote form

Coverage lines an electrician typically carries (industry-typical estimates):

  • General liability: the signature exposure is a fire from faulty wiring — third-party property damage and bodily injury from your on-site work. III commercial general liability.
  • Products-completed operations: a wiring job that fails and ignites after completion — the critical electrician long-tail. IRMI products-completed operations.
  • Workers' comp: electrocution, arc-flash burns, shock, and falls make electrical work an OSHA Focus Four fatal-hazard trade; comp is usually the largest line. OSHA Focus Four.
  • Commercial auto + tools (inland marine): service vans, and the meters/drills/wire pullers/generators stolen from vans or job sites. III artisan contractors.

State variation is large — workers'-comp class rates, licensing/bond rules, and tort environment all vary by state.

For Connecticut-specific direction, see the filed-rate table above.

Industry context — what published research says about Electrician coverage

  • Faulty-wiring fire is the signature electrician claim. Electrical distribution & lighting equipment is the leading cause of home-fire property damage (~$1.6B/yr per NFPA), so GL and your code discipline are what underwriters weigh most. NFPA electrical fires.
  • Completed operations is the electrician long-tail. A wiring job can cause a fire long after you leave, so products-completed-operations coverage — not premises liability — is the sub-line that responds. IRMI products-completed operations.
  • Electrocution and arc-flash make comp the biggest line. Electrocution is an OSHA Focus Four construction killer, and NFPA 70E sets the shock/arc-flash safe-work requirements OSHA relies on. NFPA 70E.
  • A mobile trade needs auto + inland marine. Service vans carrying crews and materials need commercial auto, and your meters, drills, and generators need an inland-marine floater away from the shop. III artisan contractors.

How to lower your electrician insurance cost

General levers that apply nationally — Connecticut operators may also have state-specific levers (e.g. non-subscriber WC, multi-jurisdiction permit consolidation).

Comply with NEC (NFPA 70) & NFPA 70E
A documented electrical-safety-in-the-workplace program signals lower risk to underwriters and cuts both fire and shock claims. NFPA 70E.
Enforce arc-flash PPE & lockout/tagout
De-energize before work; OSHA 1910.333 safe-work practices reduce the shock/burn claims that drive comp premium. OSHA 1910.333.
Run a written safety program (Focus Four)
Target the OSHA Focus Four — especially electrocution and falls — with training and documented procedures to lower your loss frequency. OSHA Focus Four.
Keep permit & inspection discipline
Pulling permits and passing inspections documents code-compliant work and cuts the completed-operations fire claims that hit years later. IRMI products-completed operations.
Raise deductibles + bundle into a BOP
A higher property/inland-marine deductible plus a BOP (III's most cost-effective property+GL base for artisan contractors) lowers premium. III artisan contractors.
Manage your experience mod
Fewer losses lower the NCCI experience mod and your workers'-comp premium over time — the compounding lever. NCCI experience rating.
Supervise apprentices & collect sub COIs
Proper journeyman supervision and certificates of insurance from subs keep uninsured payroll from inflating your premium. III small-business basics.

Get your actual Connecticut quote in 5 minutes

The data above is regulator-filed direction. Your actual Connecticut quote depends on class code, payroll, experience modifier, and the LCM each carrier files.

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More Connecticut rate-filing detail

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Related guides

Sources cited (national context above)

  1. Home Fires Caused by Electrical Distribution & Lighting Equipment — National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), 2024
  2. Construction Focus Four (electrocution) — Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), 2024
  3. Electrical Incidents — Causes — Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), 2024
  4. Safe Electrical Work Practices — 29 CFR 1910.333 — Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), 2024
  5. NFPA 70E — Electrical Safety in the Workplace — National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), 2024
  6. Insurance for Artisan Contractors — Insurance Information Institute (III), 2024
  7. Workers' Compensation Insurance — Insurance Information Institute (III), 2024
  8. Products-Completed Operations — International Risk Management Institute (IRMI), 2024
  9. Contractors Professional Liability Insurance — International Risk Management Institute (IRMI), 2024
  10. The ABCs of Experience Rating — National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI), 2024
📘 Educational, not advice. This state-specific cost page is general educational content reviewed by Jason Wootton, our licensed P&C Insurance Agent (NPN 7694718). Bureau-filed loss-cost changes do not directly equal carrier rate changes — your final quote depends on class code, payroll, experience modifier, schedule credits/debits, and the carrier's LCM. For actual numbers, get a real quote.
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