General Contractor Insurance Rates (NAICS 236220) | GBC

General Contractor Workers' Comp Rates (NAICS 236220)

NAICS 236220 · industry rates

General Contractor insurance rates

What general contractor businesses pay for Workers' Comp — filed loss costs summarized from public state-DOI filings across 10 state(s).

General Contractor businesses price Workers' Compensation off their NCCI class code, and the premium is driven by the filed loss cost each state regulator has approved for that work. This page summarizes what general contractor operations pay by state; for the full class-by-class filing detail, follow the class-code links below.

Lowest filed
$0.25 / $100 payroll
OR — state-DOI filing
Highest filed
$2.43 / $100 payroll
NJ — state-DOI filing
States tracked
10
distinct public filings captured
Filed Workers' Comp loss cost per $100 payroll by state — General Contractor
Filed Workers' Comp loss cost per $100 payroll by state — General ContractorNJ$2.43MN$1.63WI$1.01CT$0.81MA$0.80MO$0.73AL$0.43MI$0.34IN$0.30OR$0.25
Source: Public state-DOI / SERFF rate filings

See the full filed loss cost by state

General Contractor Workers' Comp is priced off NCCI class code:

What coverage a General Contractor business needs

Most general contractor operations carry Workers' Compensation — legally required in almost every state once you have employees — plus General Liability for third-party bodily-injury and property-damage claims, and, where vehicles or tools are involved, Commercial Auto and Tools & Equipment coverage. Workers' Comp is usually the largest single line for hands-on trades, because the class code reflects the injury risk of the actual work performed rather than the size of the business.

How the rate is set: your filed loss cost is only the regulator-approved baseline. Your actual premium is that loss cost multiplied by your carrier's loss-cost multiplier (LCM), your experience modifier (which rewards a clean claims history), and your payroll divided by $100. Two general contractor businesses in the same state can pay very different rates once their experience modifier and carrier are applied to the same filed loss cost.

Beyond the filed loss costs above, the national economics of the commercial lines a general contractor operation buys shape what carriers ultimately charge. Across the U.S. in 2023, those lines posted (per the NAIC Report on Profitability by Line by State): Workers' Compensation at a 45.1% loss ratio; General Liability at a 60.2% loss ratio; Commercial Auto at a 74.4% loss ratio. Line-level profitability drives the loss-cost multipliers and rates a general contractor business sees — the market context behind the per-state filings summarized here.

Methodology

Filed loss costs summarized here are drawn from public state-DOI rate filings (via each state's SERFF portal), or public NCCI State Advisory Forum summaries, for the NCCI class code mapped to NAICS 236220. Loss costs are per $100 of payroll before the carrier's loss-cost multiplier; your actual rate depends on your carrier's LCM, experience modifier, and state. No proprietary NCCI manual content is reproduced. See our full sourcing policy for how filings are retrieved and verified.

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