Does Your Company Need Hired & Non-Owned Auto Coverage?
Many Texas businesses rely on employee vehicles for errands, deliveries, or customer visits. What happens if an accident occurs while driving for work? Hired and non-owned auto coverage (HNOA) protects your company when employees or contractors use personal or rented vehicles for business tasks. It’s one of the most overlooked extensions of commercial auto insurance that can save you from costly liability claims.
What Hired & Non-Owned Auto Coverage Actually Covers
HNOA insurance protects businesses from claims of property damage or bodily injury caused by vehicles not owned by the company. If an employee gets into an accident while driving their own car to a client site, your business can still be sued. This policy covers legal defense, settlements, and judgments when a personal auto policy falls short.
When Your Business Needs It Most
Even small companies face exposure. Do staff members pick up supplies, deliver parts, or visit customers? Each trip creates liability. According to the Insurance Information Institute, more than 20% of all commercial claims involve employee-driven personal vehicles. Without HNOA, your business could be responsible for medical costs and legal fees that exceed an employee’s personal limits.
Common Scenarios Where Coverage Applies
Each of these incidents can trigger liability for the employer, even though the company doesn’t own the vehicle involved. Lawsuits often name both the driver and the business, regardless of who owns the car. Without hired and non-owned auto coverage, one accident could create financial exposure that ripples through the entire company:
Errands: An employee uses their vehicle for a business purchase and hits another car.
Deliveries: A contractor delivers equipment using a rented van.
Client visits: A manager drives their car to a meeting and causes an accident.
Rented vehicles: Staff rent a car for out-of-town business travel.
What HNOA Doesn’t Cover
This policy doesn’t protect physical damage to employee vehicles—it covers liability only. Businesses that rent cars frequently should consider a rental damage waiver or add physical damage endorsements. Your independent insurance agent can explain where coverage stops and recommend cost-effective options to fill the gaps.
Policy Limits and Coordination with Personal Insurance
Even with hired and non-owned auto coverage in place, understanding how limits coordinate with personal insurance is vital. The employee’s policy responds first; your business coverage steps in when their limits are exceeded. Because jury verdicts and repair costs keep climbing, most companies should choose at least $1 million in liability protection. Review endorsements annually—especially if your business expands routes, hires more drivers, or adds rental vehicles for seasonal work.
How to Strengthen Your Commercial Auto Strategy
Pairing HNOA coverage with your standard commercial auto insurance ensures you’re protected in every driving scenario—owned, rented, or borrowed. An independent agency like Garrett Insurance reviews all vehicle-related exposures and tailors limits to your real-world operations, not just your fleet list.
Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.