Why personal auto isn't enough
Almost every personal auto policy in Oklahoma contains a business-use exclusion. The moment a vehicle is being used in furtherance of your business — making deliveries, traveling between job sites, hauling materials, picking up a client — coverage can be denied. A single denied claim involving a serious accident can be financially devastating.
Commercial auto insurance is specifically designed for vehicles used in business operations. It covers the same things personal auto covers — liability, collision, comprehensive, uninsured motorist — but priced and structured for commercial risk.
What commercial auto covers
- LiabilityBodily injury and property damage to others when you or an employee causes an accident.
- Physical damage (collision + comprehensive)Repair or replacement of your business vehicles from accidents, hail, theft, vandalism, etc.
- Uninsured/Underinsured MotoristCritical in Oklahoma — covers you when the at-fault driver lacks adequate coverage.
- Medical payments / PIPMedical costs for drivers and passengers regardless of fault.
- Hired autoCoverage when employees rent vehicles for business use.
- Non-owned autoCoverage when employees use their own vehicles for business — protects the business from being pulled into employees' claims.
- Trailer coverageTrailers attached to or detached from covered vehicles.
Symbol coverage — how commercial auto policies are structured
Commercial auto uses numbered "symbols" to define which vehicles are covered:
- Symbol 1 — Any auto (broadest, most expensive)
- Symbol 7 — Specifically described autos only
- Symbol 8 — Hired autos only
- Symbol 9 — Non-owned autos only
Choosing the right combination matters enormously. A business with one work truck and occasional employee errands needs very different symbol coverage than a delivery operation with 20 vehicles. We structure the policy to match your actual exposure.
The common gap. Many businesses cover their owned vehicles correctly but forget hired and non-owned auto coverage. Then an employee runs an errand in their personal car, causes a crash, and the business gets named in the lawsuit with no commercial coverage to defend it. Hired/non-owned coverage is inexpensive and closes that gap.
Who needs commercial auto in Oklahoma
- Contractors and tradespeople with work trucks
- Delivery and courier services
- Real estate agents and brokers who drive clients
- Mobile service businesses (cleaning, landscaping, home services)
- Food trucks and mobile vendors
- Businesses where employees regularly drive personal vehicles for work
- Any business that owns vehicles in the business name
- Rideshare-style operations (though personal auto + rideshare endorsement may suffice for individuals)
- Trucking operations subject to FMCSA/DOT regulations
DOT and trucking considerations
If you operate vehicles over 10,001 GVWR in interstate commerce, FMCSA regulations require minimum financial responsibility limits — usually $750,000 for non-hazardous freight, higher for hazmat. Trucking insurance has additional coverages:
- Motor truck cargo — covers freight you're hauling
- MCS-90 endorsement — federally mandated public liability
- Trailer interchange — trailers from other carriers in your possession
- Bobtail coverage — coverage when driving without a trailer
- Non-trucking liability — coverage during personal use of the truck
We write these.
Driver MVR review and your premium
Commercial auto carriers pull motor vehicle records (MVRs) on all drivers. Tickets, accidents, and licensing issues all affect rates significantly. We help you understand which carriers tolerate certain history (a stale speeding ticket, a years-old accident) and which won't, so we can place you with the right one.