Wrap Shop Insurance: The Coverage That Actually Matters (and What It Costs)
Garage keepers, general liability, inland marine, workers' comp — what each policy covers for a wrap shop, realistic annual costs, and the gaps that sink shops.

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You have other people's vehicles in your building every day — sometimes $200,000 worth of them at once. Insurance is not the fun part of running a wrap shop, but one dropped Porsche keys incident uninsured can end a business that took five years to build. Here's the coverage map in plain language, with real cost ranges.
Garage keepers: the one wrap shops actually need
Garage keepers legal liability covers customer vehicles in your care, custody, and control — in the shop, in the lot overnight, and (depending on the policy) on a test drive to check a wrap. Standard general liability specifically EXCLUDES damage to property in your care, which surprises a lot of new shop owners at claim time.
Two structure choices matter:
- •Legal liability only pays when you're at fault (a tech drops a ladder on a hood). Cheaper.
- •Direct primary pays regardless of fault (hail dents six customer cars in your lot). More expensive, and what you want if vehicles sleep outside.
Realistic cost: $1,500–$4,000/year for a small shop with $250k–$500k of vehicle coverage, scaling with how many vehicles you hold and their value. Exotic-heavy shops need higher limits and should say so explicitly — a $500k policy doesn't help the day two supercars share your floor.
The rest of the stack
- •General liability — slip-and-fall, damage you cause outside vehicles-in-care, completed operations (the wrap you installed peels and takes paint with it a month later — completed ops is the part that responds). $500–$1,500/year for a small shop.
- •Commercial property / BOP — your building contents: printer, laminator, material inventory. Usually bundled as a Business Owner's Policy with general liability; the bundle typically runs $1,000–$2,500/year. Insure the printer at replacement cost, not what you paid used.
- •Inland marine — tools and equipment that leave the building. If you do mobile installs, your tool kit, heat guns, and that transported material need this rider; property coverage stops at your door. $300–$800/year.
- •Workers' comp — required in nearly every state once you have employees (and in some, for any employee count including one). Installer class rates typically run $3–$7 per $100 of payroll. If you use freelance installers, verify THEIR coverage in the agreement — an uninsured 1099 injured in your bay becomes your claim more often than owners think.
- •Commercial auto — your shop vehicle, parts runs, and driving customer vehicles beyond incidental movement.
- •Cyber/data — cheap add-on if you store customer cards or run your booking online; often $300–$500/year.
What a real shop pays
Pulling it together, a two-to-four-person shop holding a few customer vehicles at a time typically lands at $5,000–$12,000/year all-in — garage keepers and workers' comp being the biggest lines. Solo operators without employees can be closer to $2,500–$4,500.
Three ways owners keep it sane:
- •Use an agent who writes auto-service businesses — wrap shops get mis-classed as "sign companies" (cheaper, wrong) or "body shops" (pricier, also wrong) by generalist agents; the misclassification bites at claim time, not quote time.
- •Document vehicle condition at intake. Timestamped walk-around photos when the car arrives kill the "your guys scratched it" dispute before it becomes a claim — make it part of the job intake process on every vehicle, no exceptions.
- •Revisit limits annually. The policy you bought as a one-bay startup doesn't cover the shop that now holds eight fleet vans on Friday nights.
Insurance is a line item until the day it's the whole business. Get garage keepers first, get classed correctly, and photograph every intake — that combination handles most of what actually goes wrong.
Sal Lara
Founder, Wraptor
Sal runs a vehicle wrap and tint studio and built Wraptor to handle the operations work he was sick of doing in spreadsheets. Writes about pricing, materials, and shop ops from inside the trade.
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