Insurance is the third-largest expense for most Amazon DSPs — after payroll and vehicle costs — typically consuming 8-12% of gross revenue. A 25-route DSP running 30 vans can expect $140,000-$250,000/year in total insurance premiums across commercial auto, general liability, cargo, workers’ compensation, and umbrella policies. That’s $12,000-$21,000/month flowing through your insurance accounts, and the way you book it directly affects the accuracy of your monthly P&L.
Most DSP owners buy insurance, set up autopay, and never think about it until renewal. That’s how you end up overpaying by $15,000-$30,000/year — and misreporting your monthly financials the entire time. This guide covers Amazon’s Amazon DSP insurance requirements, what each policy actually costs, how to account for premiums properly, and how to save money without reducing coverage. For the complete financial picture, see our Amazon DSP bookkeeping guide.
Amazon specifies minimum coverage levels in every DSP agreement. These aren’t suggestions — failure to maintain required coverage is grounds for immediate contract termination. Here are the standard minimums:
| Coverage Type | Amazon Minimum | Recommended Level |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial auto liability | $1M combined single limit | $1M CSL (meet requirement) |
| General liability | $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate | $1M/$2M (meet requirement) |
| Cargo / bailee coverage | $100K per occurrence (varies) | $250K+ |
| Workers’ compensation | Statutory limits (state-mandated) | Statutory (no choice) |
| Employer’s liability | $1M per accident / $1M disease | $1M/$1M (meet requirement) |
| Umbrella / excess liability | $5M (many contracts) | $5M-$10M |
| Hired & non-owned auto | $1M CSL | $1M CSL |
Amazon must be listed as an Additional Insured on your commercial auto and general liability policies. Your insurance carrier must provide Amazon with a certificate of insurance (COI) annually and whenever policies renew or change. Lapsed coverage — even for one day — triggers an Amazon compliance flag that can result in route reduction or contract review.
Important: Amazon’s insurance requirements are minimums. In high-litigation markets (Florida, California, Texas, New York), commercial auto claims from delivery vehicle accidents regularly exceed $1M. An umbrella policy is not optional — it’s the buffer between a bad accident and losing your business.
Commercial auto insurance for delivery fleets is the most expensive policy in your insurance portfolio. The high accident frequency in stop-and-go residential delivery, combined with Amazon’s branding on every vehicle (which attracts plaintiff attention in accident lawsuits), pushes premiums significantly above standard commercial fleet rates.
| Fleet Size | Market | Annual Premium | Per Vehicle Per Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 – 15 vans | Suburban | $35,000 – $60,000 | $3,500 – $4,000 |
| 10 – 15 vans | Urban | $50,000 – $85,000 | $5,000 – $5,700 |
| 25 – 35 vans | Suburban | $75,000 – $120,000 | $3,000 – $3,400 |
| 25 – 35 vans | Urban | $110,000 – $200,000 | $4,400 – $5,700 |
| 40 – 50 vans | Suburban | $100,000 – $160,000 | $2,500 – $3,200 |
| 40 – 50 vans | Urban | $160,000 – $280,000 | $4,000 – $5,600 |
Per-vehicle costs decline with fleet size because insurers spread fixed underwriting and administration costs across more units. The breakpoint where you start seeing meaningful per-vehicle savings is typically around 25 vehicles.
General liability protects your DSP against non-auto claims: slip-and-fall at a customer’s property, property damage from a misdelivered package, or bodily injury claims unrelated to driving. Amazon requires $1M per occurrence and $2M aggregate.
General liability is relatively affordable compared to commercial auto. The coverage is straightforward, and claims frequency for delivery businesses is low — most claims involve property damage (broken flower pots, scratched fences, sprinkler heads) rather than serious injury.
Cargo insurance covers the value of packages in your possession — from the time your drivers load at the Amazon station until delivery. Bailee insurance specifically covers goods held in your care, custody, and control.
If a van is stolen with 200+ packages or a fire destroys packages in your staging area, you’re liable for the retail value of those goods without cargo coverage. A single van loaded with high-value electronics could carry $50,000-$100,000 in merchandise.
Amazon’s minimum is typically $100K, but the incremental cost to increase to $250K is modest — and the exposure from a van theft during peak season (when package values spike) justifies the additional premium.
Workers’ compensation is state-mandated and non-negotiable. Every DSP driver is a W-2 employee entitled to workers’ comp coverage for on-the-job injuries. Delivery drivers face elevated risk from vehicle accidents, repetitive lifting injuries (40-70 lb packages), dog bites, and slip-and-fall on customer property.
Workers’ comp premiums are based on:
Classification code rate x payroll / 100 = base premium
Delivery drivers are classified under NCCI Code 7380 (Drivers, Chauffeurs & Helpers — NOC) or similar state-specific codes. The rate varies dramatically by state:
| State | Approximate Rate (per $100 payroll) | Annual Cost (60 drivers, $3.3M payroll) |
|---|---|---|
| Texas | $4.50 – $6.00 | $148,500 – $198,000 |
| California | $5.50 – $8.00 | $181,500 – $264,000 |
| Florida | $4.00 – $5.50 | $132,000 – $181,500 |
| Illinois | $5.00 – $7.00 | $165,000 – $231,000 |
| Ohio (state fund) | $3.50 – $5.00 | $115,500 – $165,000 |
| Georgia | $3.00 – $4.50 | $99,000 – $148,500 |
Your Experience Modification Rate (EMR) adjusts these base rates up or down based on your claims history. A new DSP starts at 1.0 (baseline). A DSP with good safety records and few claims can drop to 0.75-0.85, reducing premiums by 15-25%. A DSP with high claims can see an EMR of 1.3-1.5, increasing premiums by 30-50%.
For more on managing driver-related costs, see our Amazon DSP driver payroll guide.
Pro Tip: Workers’ comp premiums are based on estimated payroll at policy inception. The insurer audits your actual payroll at year-end. If you hired 15 extra drivers for Peak Season, your actual payroll will exceed estimates — triggering an audit bill of $10,000-$30,000. Accrue for this monthly in your books: track actual payroll vs. estimated and set aside the difference as a workers’ comp accrual.
An umbrella policy provides additional coverage above the limits of your commercial auto, general liability, and employer’s liability policies. Amazon requires $5M for most DSP contracts.
A delivery van accident involving a pedestrian or cyclist can generate claims of $2M-$10M+ in personal injury. Your $1M commercial auto policy covers the first million; the umbrella covers the excess. Without it, you’re personally liable for amounts above your primary policy limits — which means losing your business, personal assets, and potentially filing bankruptcy.
| Umbrella Limit | Annual Premium |
|---|---|
| $5M | $5,000 – $15,000 |
| $10M | $10,000 – $25,000 |
| $15M | $18,000 – $40,000 |
Umbrella insurance is highly leveraged — the cost per million of coverage is far lower than primary policy costs. Going from $5M to $10M might only add $5,000-$10,000/year. Given that a single serious accident can generate claims exceeding $5M, the incremental coverage is worth serious consideration.
This is where most DSP owners get their P&L wrong. Insurance premiums are large, infrequent payments that distort monthly financials if booked incorrectly.
If you pay a $120,000 commercial auto premium in January and expense the full amount:
Your monthly financials become meaningless for decision-making.
| Transaction | Date | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pay annual premium | January 1 | Prepaid Insurance (1350): $120,000 | Cash: $120,000 |
| Monthly expense (Jan) | January 31 | Commercial Auto Insurance (6400): $10,000 | Prepaid Insurance: $10,000 |
| Monthly expense (Feb) | February 28 | Commercial Auto Insurance (6400): $10,000 | Prepaid Insurance: $10,000 |
| … repeat monthly | |||
| Monthly expense (Dec) | December 31 | Commercial Auto Insurance (6400): $10,000 | Prepaid Insurance: $10,000 |
At year-end, the Prepaid Insurance balance is $0 (fully amortized) and each month shows $10,000 in insurance expense — an accurate reflection of the cost of coverage for that period.
Most DSPs have 5-6 active policies with different renewal dates. Set up a prepaid insurance sub-account or tracking class for each:
| Policy | Annual Premium | Renewal Date | Monthly Expense |
|---|---|---|---|
| Commercial auto | $120,000 | January 1 | $10,000 |
| General liability | $8,000 | March 1 | $667 |
| Cargo / bailee | $3,000 | March 1 | $250 |
| Workers’ compensation | $165,000 | July 1 | $13,750 |
| Umbrella | $12,000 | January 1 | $1,000 |
| Total | $308,000 | $25,667 |
Your monthly P&L should show a consistent ~$25,667 in total insurance expense regardless of when premiums are actually paid. This gives you an accurate picture of monthly profitability — which matters enormously when your net margins are 5-10%.
Workers’ compensation and general liability policies are based on estimated payroll and revenue at policy inception. At the end of each policy year, your insurer conducts an audit of actual numbers. If actual exceeds estimated, you owe additional premium. If actual is below, you receive a refund.
For benchmarking your DSP against industry norms:
| DSP Size | Gross Revenue | Total Insurance | % of Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small (10-15 routes) | $1.2M – $1.8M | $110,000 – $170,000 | 9 – 12% |
| Mid (20-30 routes) | $2.4M – $4.2M | $180,000 – $310,000 | 7 – 10% |
| Large (35-50 routes) | $4.5M – $7.0M | $260,000 – $450,000 | 6 – 8% |
Larger DSPs benefit from economies of scale — per-vehicle rates decline, workers’ comp rates improve with better EMRs, and umbrella coverage becomes proportionally cheaper. If your insurance exceeds 12% of revenue as a mid-size DSP, you’re either in a high-cost market, have a poor claims history, or haven’t shopped your policies recently.
Insurance is one of the few DSP costs you can directly reduce through shopping. Unlike payroll (set by market wages) and Amazon rates (non-negotiable), insurance premiums vary 20-40% between carriers for identical coverage.
Pro Tip: The cheapest time to shop insurance is when your claims history is clean and your EMR is low. Don’t wait until after a bad year to switch carriers — you’ll be shopping at a disadvantage. Lock in competitive rates during good years and build relationships with carriers who will work with you if claims increase.
Insurance claims affect your DSP finances in three ways:
| Claim Type | Deductible | Premium Impact (3 years) | Total Financial Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minor fender bender ($5K claim) | $2,500 | $8,000 – $15,000 | $10,500 – $17,500 |
| Serious auto accident ($100K claim) | $5,000 | $30,000 – $60,000 | $35,000 – $65,000 |
| Driver injury (workers’ comp, $25K) | $0 (WC has no deductible) | $15,000 – $35,000 | $15,000 – $35,000 |
| Pedestrian injury ($500K+ claim) | $5,000 | $75,000 – $150,000 | $80,000 – $155,000 |
A single serious accident costs $80,000-$155,000 over three years in direct and indirect costs. This is why safety programs, dash cameras, and driver training aren’t just operational niceties — they’re financial imperatives. Every accident avoided is $10,000-$155,000 in preserved margin.
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