Nursery & Tree Farm Insurance Cost in Kansas (2026) | Get Business Coverage

How much does nursery & tree farm insurance cost in Kansas? (2026)

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

Nursery & Tree Farm 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 nursery & tree farm operations, cited to their SERFF tracking numbers — primary-source, government-held pricing records. Read the full national context on the Nursery & Tree Farm 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 nursery & tree farm 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 — Nursery & Tree Farm insurance overview

A nursery or tree farm insures two things at once: people and living inventory. On the people side, agriculture is the most hazardous industry in the United States — a 21.5-per-100,000 work-related fatality rate — so payroll-rated workers' compensation is the core line, and anyone who mixes, loads, or applies pesticides is a regulated "handler" under EPA's Worker Protection Standard, with restricted-use products requiring a certified applicator. On the inventory side, your nursery stock — the plants and trees themselves — is exposed to weather, fire, and wildlife, a property risk the USDA even runs a dedicated crop program for.

As an industry-typical estimate, a small grower runs roughly $1,500–$7,000+/year across general liability, nursery-stock property, commercial auto, and workers' comp — more with heavy pesticide use, large payroll, or high-value stock. No insurance bureau publishes nursery premiums, so every total here is an estimate; the one hard, filed number is workers' comp: our filed-rate data puts the nursery/tree-farm NCCI class 0005 advisory loss cost at $0.62–$4.46 per $100 of payroll across 18 states. Each coverage fact below is sourced to a named authority (EPA, OSHA, USDA, university ag-extension). Use the calculator, then get a real quote in 5 minutes.

National benchmark figures

Published cost ranges for Nursery & Tree Farm insurance — useful as a national baseline against which the Kansas filings above signal local direction.

Most hazardous industry
21.5 / 100k FTE
Agriculture/forestry/fishing is the most hazardous US industry at a 21.5-per-100,000 work-related fatality rate — roughly 6× the all-industry average — which pushes WC pricing up. UF/IFAS ag-injury statistics
Pesticide handlers
EPA-regulated
Workers who mix, load, or apply pesticides are regulated "handlers" under EPA's Worker Protection Standard, requiring training and protection. EPA pesticide handler
Restricted-use products
Certified applicator
Federal law requires anyone applying or supervising restricted-use pesticides to be a certified applicator — a licensing and liability driver. EPA applicator certification
Workers' comp class 0005
$0.62–$4.46 / $100
Nursery/tree-farm NCCI class 0005 advisory loss cost ranges $0.62–$4.46 per $100 of payroll across the 18 states in our filed-rate data — the one hard filed figure on this page. OSHA agricultural hazards
Nursery stock at risk
Weather / fire / wildlife
Living inventory is exposed to adverse weather, fire, and wildlife — a property/inland-marine exposure the USDA runs a dedicated nursery program for. USDA RMA

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 nursery or tree farm typically carries (industry-typical estimates):

  • Workers' compensation (usually the core line): agriculture is the most hazardous US industry (21.5 deaths/100k FTE); machinery, cutting tools, ladders, and heat are routine hazards. Filed class 0005 advisory loss cost runs $0.62–$4.46 per $100 of payroll in our 18-state data. OSHA agricultural hazards.
  • Pesticide / chemical liability: workers who mix, load, or apply pesticides are regulated "handlers" under EPA's Worker Protection Standard, and restricted-use products require a certified applicator — a real compliance and pollution/bodily-injury exposure. EPA Worker Protection Standard.
  • Nursery stock (property): living inventory is exposed to adverse weather, fire, and wildlife — the USDA runs a dedicated nursery crop-insurance program for exactly these perils. USDA RMA Nursery Value Select.
  • Commercial auto: delivery trucks and equipment haulers need commercial auto — a personal auto policy provides no coverage for a business-owned vehicle. III commercial auto.

State variation is large — whether ag labor is even required to carry workers' comp varies by state, along with comp class rates and pesticide-licensing rules.

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

Industry context — what published research says about Nursery & Tree Farm coverage

  • Agriculture is the most hazardous US industry. A 21.5-per-100,000 fatality rate — machinery, cutting tools, ladders, and heat are routine nursery hazards — makes payroll-rated workers' comp the core cost line. OSHA agricultural hazards.
  • Pesticide handling is a regulated compliance exposure. Anyone who mixes, loads, or applies pesticides is a WPS "handler," and restricted-use products require a certified applicator — creating chemical/pollution and bodily-injury liability. EPA Worker Protection Standard.
  • Whether you must carry workers' comp varies by state. Many states exempt agricultural labor from mandatory workers' comp entirely or above payroll/employee thresholds, so your baseline requirement — and cost — is state-specific. Iowa State CALT.
  • Your nursery stock is insurable property. Living inventory faces weather, fire, and wildlife loss; the USDA even runs a dedicated Nursery Value Select crop program for these perils. USDA RMA.

How to lower your nursery & tree farm insurance cost

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

Use certified applicators + keep WPS training records
Certified restricted-use applicators and documented Worker Protection Standard training reduce chemical-liability claims and demonstrate compliance to underwriters. EPA applicator certification.
Run a documented farm-safety program
Machinery guarding, heat-illness prevention, PPE, and equipment training cut the injuries that dominate agricultural workers'-comp claims. OSHA agricultural hazards.
Verify your WC class + state exemption status
Confirm your payroll is on the correct nursery class and whether your state even requires ag workers' comp — both directly set your cost. Iowa State CALT.
Right-size your nursery-stock property values
Insure living inventory to its real replacement value — not inflated — and document it, so you pay for the property risk you actually carry. USDA RMA.
Collect contract-labor COIs
Require contract crews and applicators to carry their own coverage and provide certificates, so their exposure doesn't fall onto your policy. III small-business basics.
Bundle GL + property into a BOP where eligible
Packaging general liability and property into a businessowners policy is typically cheaper than standalone policies for a qualifying small grower. III businessowners policies.
Keep a clean claims record
A loss-free history — especially no pesticide-liability or serious injury claim — earns the best renewal pricing across WC and general liability. EPA nurseries & greenhouses.

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 1-833-505-2594

More Kansas rate-filing detail

Get a real Kansas quote for nursery & tree farm

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)

  1. Agricultural Worker Protection Standard (WPS) — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), 2024
  2. Definition of Pesticide Handler under the WPS — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), 2024
  3. Certification Standards for Pesticide Applicators — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), 2024
  4. Agricultural Nurseries and Greenhouses — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), 2024
  5. Agricultural Operations — Hazards — Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), 2024
  6. Agricultural Injury Statistics (AgFF fatality rate) — University of Florida IFAS (Ag Safety), 2023
  7. Workers' Compensation and the Exemption of Agricultural Labor — Iowa State University Center for Agricultural Law & Taxation, 2023
  8. Nursery Value Select — Crop Insurance — USDA Risk Management Agency (RMA), 2024
  9. 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 🗙