All coverage lines
Coverage line

Commercial Umbrella for dually trucks

A commercial umbrella adds $1M–$5M of liability protection over your primary dually commercial auto policy — essential for contractors and haulers with significant exposure.

Commercial Umbrella — dually truck

What it covers

  • Excess liability over your commercial auto policy
  • $1M, $2M, $3M, and $5M umbrella limits
  • Covers gaps between policy limits and catastrophic claims
  • Defense costs included
  • Follows your dually into all 50 states

Who it's for

  • Contractors with significant commercial operations
  • Livestock and equipment haulers with high-value loads
  • Any dually owner whose current limits may be insufficient

Why CCA

  • Umbrella markets that coordinate with commercial dually policies
  • Fast quotes alongside your primary commercial auto
  • Claims advocacy for large liability events
Commercial Umbrella — FAQ

Common questions about commercial umbrella

It depends on your risk. Contractors who work on large commercial projects, or haulers who regularly transport high-value loads, often need $2M–$5M total liability. An umbrella adds that cost-effectively.

Commercial umbrellas typically follow commercial auto policies. If you have both commercial and personal use on your truck, we structure the coverage so there are no gaps.

A dually (or dual-rear-wheel, DRW) truck has two wheels on each side of the rear axle — four rear wheels total. This gives significantly higher payload and towing capacity. Common examples: F-350 DRW, Ram 3500 DRW, Silverado 3500 DRW.

It depends on GVWR and use. Most dually pickups have a GVWR above 10,000 lbs when loaded, which can trigger commercial vehicle regulations in some states. For insurance purposes, if you use it for business, you need commercial auto regardless of GVWR.

Texas, Oklahoma, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, and other agricultural and energy-producing states have high concentrations of dually truck owners. We write dually insurance in all of these states.

Generally yes — higher GVWR, higher replacement cost, and commercial use factors increase premiums. But the real risk of underinsuring a dually (ACV vs. agreed value, personal vs. commercial auto) is far more costly.

A dually F-350 or Ram 3500 typically has 1,000–2,000 lbs more payload capacity than the same truck in single-rear-wheel configuration. This directly affects what you can legally haul and what insurance you need.

Yes, and many owners do. Coverage for dual-use trucks needs to be structured correctly — commercial auto policies can cover both business and personal use, while personal auto policies may not cover the business side at all.

Modern dually pickups like the F-450 and Ram 3500 can tow up to 30,000+ lbs in gooseneck configuration. Knowing your towing configuration is important for matching your cargo and liability coverage to the actual risk.

A fifth-wheel hitch connects to a kingpin on the trailer and is common for RVs and livestock trailers. A gooseneck hitch uses a ball in the truck bed and is common for heavy equipment and flatbed trailers. Coverage implications differ slightly by trailer type.

Dually trucks are generally less prone to rollover than standard trucks due to their wider rear stance, but the wider rear track increases the risk of sideswipes in tight spaces. Commercial use adds exposure from more miles and loaded conditions.

F-350 DRW: ~12,500–14,000 lbs GVWR. Ram 3500 DRW: ~12,800–14,000 lbs GVWR. Silverado 3500 DRW: ~13,200 lbs GVWR. These weights can affect DOT registration and insurance classification in some states.

If your commercial auto policy covers the haul, your liability pays for damage to others and your physical damage pays for your truck (if collision is included). Cargo in the bed is only covered if you have a separate cargo policy.

Trailers you own need their own physical damage coverage — commercial auto on your dually covers liability while towing, but generally not physical damage to the trailer. We can write a separate trailer policy.

Farm policies sometimes include commercial auto for farm trucks. However, for-hire hauling, contractor use, or operating under motor carrier authority typically requires a dedicated commercial auto policy, not a farm endorsement.

If your dually truck crosses state lines for commercial purposes with a GVWR over 10,001 lbs, you may fall under FMCSA jurisdiction and be required to file an MCS-90 endorsement or BI&PD filing. We advise on compliance requirements for your operation.

Ready to protect your dually truck?

Get a 15-minute quote from specialists who understand dually trucks — commercial auto, agreed value, and cargo.