Glass Contractor Insurance Cost in Texas (2026) | Get Business Coverage

How much does glass contractor insurance cost in Texas? (2026)

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

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

Recent rate-filing activity — 8 state filings across 2 commercial lines

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 glass contractor operations, with the real SERFF tracking number for each.

Line State Overall change Effective SERFF tracking
WC TX Overall -3.8% adjustment to voluntary loss cost level Jul 1, 2026 NCCI-134745334
Comm Auto TX per vehicle annual (Bodily Injury Liability) — RESIDUAL MARKET Nov 1, 2025 TAIPA-2025-CA-9419
Comm Auto TX per vehicle annual (Bodily Injury Liability) — RESIDUAL MARKET Nov 1, 2025 TAIPA-2025-CA-9419-T28
Comm Auto TX per vehicle annual (Bodily Injury Liability) — RESIDUAL MARKET Nov 1, 2025 TAIPA-2025-CA-9419-T2
Comm Auto TX per vehicle annual (Bodily Injury Liability) — RESIDUAL MARKET Nov 1, 2025 TAIPA-2025-CA-9419-T34
Comm Auto TX per vehicle annual (Bodily Injury Liability) — RESIDUAL MARKET Nov 1, 2025 TAIPA-2025-CA-9419-T23
Comm Auto TX per vehicle annual (Bodily Injury Liability) — RESIDUAL MARKET Nov 1, 2025 TAIPA-2025-CA-9419-T62
Comm Auto TX ISO multistate zone-rated loss-cost revision Sep 12, 2025 ISOF-G134311774

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 — Glass Contractor insurance overview

The signature glazier claim isn't installing the glass — it's what happens after. A storefront pane, glass railing, or curtain-wall unit that fails or falls once your crew leaves is a completed operations claim, the exposure that most defines this trade. The second is falls: installing storefronts and curtain walls puts crews above 6 feet, where OSHA fall-protection duty (and the injuries behind it) drive both general liability and payroll-rated workers' compensation. Add the high-value glass itself — fragile in transit and until it's set, which is what an installation floater covers — and the code exposure that glass in hazardous locations must be certified safety glazing, and the stack fills out.

As an industry-typical estimate, a small glazing operation runs roughly $1,500–$7,000+/year across general liability, installation floater, commercial auto, and workers' comp — more for high-rise curtain-wall or heavy commercial work. No insurance bureau publishes glazier premiums, so every total here is an estimate; the one hard, filed number is workers' comp: our filed-rate data puts the glazier NCCI class 5462 advisory loss cost at $0.91–$9.78 per $100 of payroll across 17 states. Each coverage fact below is sourced to a named authority (OSHA, IRMI, III, CPSC). Use the calculator, then get a real quote in 5 minutes.

National benchmark figures

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

Completed operations
Glass fails after install
A storefront pane, railing, or curtain-wall unit that fails after your crew leaves is a products-completed-operations claim — the signature glazier exposure. IRMI products-completed operations
Falls from height
6 ft OSHA duty
Installing storefronts and curtain walls puts crews above 6 feet, where OSHA requires fall protection — a top glazier injury and comp driver. OSHA 1926.501
Installation floater
Inland marine
High-value glass is fragile in transit and until installed; an installation floater covers it during that window. IRMI installation floater
Safety glazing
Code-mandated
Glass in hazardous locations (doors, sidelites, railings, near walking surfaces) must be certified safety glazing under CPSC 16 CFR 1201 — a code and liability driver. SGCC safety glazing
Workers' comp class 5462
$0.91–$9.78 / $100
Glazier NCCI class 5462 advisory loss cost ranges $0.91–$9.78 per $100 of payroll across the 17 states in our filed-rate data — the one hard filed figure on this page. OSHA fall protection

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 a glass contractor typically carries (industry-typical estimates):

  • General liability incl. completed operations: a glass panel or railing that fails after install is a products-completed-operations claim — the signature glazier exposure. IRMI products-completed operations.
  • Workers' compensation: installing storefronts/curtain walls above 6 feet triggers OSHA fall-protection duty; falls and glass lacerations drive comp. Filed class 5462 advisory loss cost runs $0.91–$9.78 per $100 of payroll in our 17-state data. OSHA 1926.501.
  • Installation floater (inland marine): high-value glass is fragile in transit and until it's installed — an installation floater covers it during that window. IRMI installation floater.
  • Commercial auto: vehicles hauling glass racks need a separate commercial auto policy — a BOP provides no coverage for vehicles. III commercial auto.

State variation is large — comp class rates, tort environment, and license/bond requirements vary by state.

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

Industry context — what published research says about Glass Contractor coverage

  • The finished glass is a completed-operations exposure. A pane, railing, or curtain-wall unit that fails or falls after the crew leaves is covered under products-completed operations — confirm it isn't excluded from your GL. IRMI products-completed operations.
  • Storefront and curtain-wall work means height. Installing above 6 feet triggers OSHA fall-protection duty; falls and glass lacerations are the injuries that push both GL and workers' comp rates up. OSHA 1926.501.
  • High-value glass needs an installation floater. Large custom glass is expensive and fragile in transit and until set; an installation floater (inland marine) covers it through that gap. IRMI installation floater.
  • Glass in hazardous locations must be safety glazing. Doors, sidelites, railings, and glazing near walking surfaces must be certified safety glazing under CPSC 16 CFR 1201 — a non-compliant install is a rework and liability exposure. SGCC safety glazing.

How to lower your glass contractor insurance cost

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

Run a documented fall-protection program
Fall-arrest, guardrails, training, and OSHA-aligned procedures cut the falls that dominate glazier comp claims and improve your experience mod. OSHA 1926.501.
Install certified safety glazing where code requires it
Using and documenting certified safety glazing in code-defined hazardous locations reduces rework and completed-operations liability. SGCC safety glazing.
Right-size your installation-floater limit
Insure the glass you actually transport and install to value — not more — so you pay for the inland-marine risk you truly carry. IRMI installation floater.
Collect subcontractor COIs
Require subs to carry their own GL and workers' comp and provide certificates before they start, so their exposure doesn't fall onto your policy. III small-business basics.
Bundle GL + property into a BOP
Packaging general liability and property into a businessowners policy is typically cheaper than standalone policies for a qualifying small glazing shop. III businessowners policies.
Right-size your workers'-comp class + limits
Confirm your payroll is on the correct glazier class (not a broader, higher-rated trade) and carry limits that match your contracts. III artisan contractors.
Keep a clean claims record
A loss-free history — especially no completed-operations or fall claim — earns the best renewal pricing across GL and workers' comp. III artisan contractors.

Get your actual Texas quote in 5 minutes

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

Get a free Texas quote → 📞 Call 1-833-505-2594

More Texas rate-filing detail

Get a real Texas quote for glass contractor

The data above shows the regulator-filed direction for Texas. 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 Texas quote →

Related guides

Sources cited (national context above)

  1. Duty to Have Fall Protection — 29 CFR 1926.501 — Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), 2024
  2. Products-Completed Operations — International Risk Management Institute (IRMI), 2024
  3. Installation Floater — International Risk Management Institute (IRMI), 2024
  4. What Is Safety Glazing? — Safety Glazing Certification Council (SGCC), 2024
  5. Safety Standard for Architectural Glazing Materials — 16 CFR Part 1201 — U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) via GPO, 2023
  6. Insurance for Artisan Contractors — Insurance Information Institute (III), 2024
  7. Business Vehicle Insurance — Insurance Information Institute (III), 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.
An unhandled error has occurred. Reload 🗙