How much does food truck insurance cost in Kansas? (2026)
Food Truck insurance pricing in Kansas is shaped by the same state-specific bureau loss-cost filings that govern every commercial policy issued in Kansas. Below: the most-recent Kansas filings affecting food truck operations, cited to their SERFF tracking numbers — primary-source, government-held pricing records. Read the full national context on the Food Truck 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 food truck operations, with the real SERFF tracking number for each.
| Line | State | Overall change | Effective | SERFF tracking |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WC | KS | Voluntary -1.0% / Assigned-risk -0.9% (proposed) | Jan 1, 2026 | NCCI-134656189 |
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 — Food Truck insurance overview
Food truck insurance pricing is driven by a small set of factors most other industries don't have: mobile risk (vehicle accidents away from a fixed base), liquor exposure (Liquor Liability if you serve alcohol at events), commissary kitchen arrangement, employees with food-handler certification, and the state you operate in. Combined this drives wide ranges — typically $2,500-$7,500/year for a single-truck operation, sometimes more or less.
Every number on this page is sourced from a named bureau, regulator, or industry-association publication (NCCI, ISO/Verisk, III, NAIC, NRA, FDA, FMCSA, BLS). Use the calculator below to estimate your range, then get a real quote in 5 minutes from 10+ carriers.
National benchmark figures
Published cost ranges for Food Truck insurance — useful as a national baseline against which the Kansas filings above signal local direction.
Industry-typical market ranges (national)
Sourced from III, NCCI, ISO, NAIC, BLS, FMCSA, FDA, NRA — government and bureau publications, not from our quote form
Market ranges from published industry sources:
- General Liability + Property + Commercial Auto bundle (or as a BOP): typically $2,500-$5,000/year per truck for single-truck operations (III Commercial Lines, 2024)
- Workers Comp: typically $0.40-$1.20/$100 of payroll for food service workers in most states (NCCI Class Code 9082)
- Liquor liability endorsement (if applicable): typically adds $400-$1,200/year (III dram-shop facts, 2024)
- Hired & Non-Owned Auto endorsement (if employees drive to events): typically adds $50-$300/year (IRMI)
State variation is large — California, New York, and New Jersey are typically the most expensive; Texas, Florida, and most Midwest states are typically the least.
For Kansas-specific direction, see the filed-rate table above.
Industry context — what published research says about Food Truck coverage
- Restaurant industry sales 2024: $1.1 trillion projected (~10% of US workforce employed in restaurants). National Restaurant Association.
- Dram-shop liability: 43 US states impose dram-shop liability on businesses serving alcohol; statutory and case-law caps vary widely. III: Social host & dram-shop liability.
- FDA Food Code 2022: the federal model code adopted by most state and local food regulators — applies to mobile food units. FDA Food Code 2022.
- FMCSA insurance filing requirements: mobile food businesses crossing state lines may need MCS-90 endorsement. FMCSA insurance filing requirements.
- Workers Compensation thresholds: WC is required from the first non-owner employee in most states; TX is opt-in (the only state where WC is not mandatory), TN requires WC at 5+ employees, GA at 3+. NAIC Workers Comp topic.
How to lower your food truck insurance cost
General levers that apply nationally — Kansas operators may also have state-specific levers (e.g. non-subscriber WC, multi-jurisdiction permit consolidation).
Get your actual Kansas quote in 5 minutes
The data above is regulator-filed direction. Your actual Kansas quote depends on class code, payroll, experience modifier, and the LCM each carrier files.
Get a free Kansas quote → 📞 Call 1-833-505-2594More Kansas rate-filing detail
- All Kansas commercial rate filings (every line, every recent filing) — the broader rate-data view for Kansas
- Rate filings by state — directory of all 47+ states with active filings
- National Rate Change Tracker — every filing across every state, sortable
Get a real Kansas quote for food truck
The data above shows the regulator-filed direction for Kansas. For your actual quote — based on payroll, experience modifier, and the LCM each carrier files — request a free quote in under 90 seconds.
Get a free Kansas quote →Related guides
Sources cited (national context above)
- Commercial Lines facts and statistics — Insurance Information Institute (III), 2024
- BLS Industry at a Glance — Food Services and Drinking Places (NAICS 722) — U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), 2024
- Workers' Compensation Insurance topic — National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC), 2024
- NCCI Atlas — Class Code 9082 (Restaurant or Tavern) — National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI), 2024
