What Is Lawn Care Business Insurance?

Lawn care business insurance is a bundle of coverages that addresses risks tied to driving to client properties, cutting grass, working around outdoor features and hauling heavy equipment. It financially protects contractors who provide outdoor services and landscaping work from property damage claims, injuries, stolen equipment and work vehicle accidents.

Your insurance bundle can address common lawn care claim scenarios, including:

  • Mowers throwing rocks into windows, cars, siding or outdoor lights
  • Crews damaging fences, sprinkler heads, edging, gates or landscaping features
  • Customers, tenants or visitors tripping over hoses, tools, debris or uneven ground
  • Mowers, trimmers, blowers or trailers stolen from trucks, garages or job sites
  • Work truck or trailer accidents while driving between lawn care jobs
  • Employees hurt while lifting equipment, using sharp tools or working in heat

Is Lawn Care Business Insurance Required?

Lawn care insurance requirements can start with licensing if you offer regulated services. Texas and Washington, for example, both require pesticide applicators to show proof they can pay for certain liability claims. Beyond licensing, you may need workers’ compensation once you hire employees, though the threshold varies by state. If you use a business-owned truck or van to drive to clients, you’ll also need commercial auto coverage that meets your state’s minimum limits.

Contracts can also create lawn care insurance requirements even if you don't need a license to operate. Clients usually ask for general liability you work around fences, windows, sprinkler systems, parked cars and people on the property. Before you can begin working, you might be asked to present a certificate of insurance, a specific liability limit or an additional insured endorsement

Check your state’s pesticide rules, local license requirements, vehicle insurance rules, workers’ compensation laws and client contracts before buying coverage for your lawn care business.

What Types of Lawn Care Insurance Should You Get?

The right lawn care insurance mix depends on how you set up your business. Variables like whether you work alone, drive between jobs, haul equipment, store gear or offer lawn treatments affect your ideal policy mix. Most new or very small lawn care businesses should start by looking at these coverages:

  • General liability insurance (when you work on client property or need proof of insurance for jobs)
  • Commercial auto (when you own a business-vehicle, like a truck or van)
  • Tools and equipment (when you carry mowers, trimmers, blowers or other gear between jobs)
  • Workers’ comp (when you hire employees, seasonal helpers or part-time crew members)
  • Trailer coverage (if you use a trailer to haul mowers, tools or supplies)
  • Pesticide or herbicide applicator coverage (if weed control, fertilizing, herbicide spraying or pesticide application is part of your services)
  • Commercial property (if you rent a office or shop for business use or keep your equipment in a garage or storage unit)
  • Cyber insurance (if you use online booking or digital payments)
  • Umbrella insurance (if contracts require higher liability limits or your jobs involve larger properties, HOAs or commercial clients)

How Much Does Lawn Care Business Insurance Cost?

Based on my analysis, the cost of lawn care business insurance changes depending on the coverage types you need in your policy mix. A minimum starting bundle with general liability and commercial auto insurance costs an average of $390 per month or $4,686 per year for lawn care businesses with less than five employees. This estimate is based on quote data across all 50 states and Washington, D.C., with most policies using $1 million per occurrence and $2 million aggregate limits. Use it as a reference point, not a quote. Your actual premium changes based on your state, vehicles, employees, payroll, services, equipment, trailer use, claims history and selected limits.

Why Trust MoneyGeek For Your Lawn Care Insurance Needs?

MoneyGeek helps small lawn care businesses compare insurance, not just read about it. Our matching tool uses your industry and location to connect you with providers that fit how your business operates, whether you mow lawns alone, run a small crew, use work vehicles or carry equipment between jobs. We don’t just point you to the cheapest option. We research providers independently, check our content for accuracy and look at what matters after the quote. That includes policy fit, easy access to documents and provider support as your business changes.

How to Get Lawn Care Insurance with Moneygeek

Get your lawn business insurance in three steps:

  1. 1
    Gather your business details

    Know your location, services, employee count, vehicle use and whether you carry equipment, use a trailer or offer lawn treatments.

  2. 2
    Identify the coverages your business needs

    List the coverages tied to your business risks. Include any client or contract requirements for limits, certificates of insurance or additional insured endorsements.

  3. 3
    Use MoneyGeek’s quote tool

    Tell us about your business and the state you're in. MoneyGeek matches you with providers that best business. From there, you can request quotes on the providers’ websites using your business details.

About Angelique Palenzuela-Cruz


Angelique Palenzuela-Cruz, Business Insurance Writer, MoneyGeek

Angelique Palenzuela-Cruz is a Business Insurance Content Writer at MoneyGeek, where she specializes in general liability, workers’ compensation and professional liability insurance. Her work helps small business owners understand how these policies apply to coverage, including risks like customer injuries, employee injuries, professional mistakes, client contract terms and industry-specific coverage requirements.
She primarily covers service-based businesses where liability and employee coverage decisions are especially important, including cleaning, consulting, beauty and wellness, childcare, education, fitness, food service, pet care, repair and maintenance, and other professional services.
Before joining MoneyGeek, Angelique spent nearly 12 years at Guthrie-Jensen Consultants, one of Southeast Asia’s largest management training firms, where she advanced from Training Consultant to Managing Consultant. In that role, she worked with business clients to assess operational needs, develop training programs and present performance analyses to executive decision-makers. She also helped establish Gladwin Training Consultancy, where she served in learning solutions and client service roles.
Her background gives her practical context for writing about how businesses operate, manage client expectations, structure teams and make risk decisions. At MoneyGeek, she applies that experience to business insurance content, connecting coverage to actual business needs.

LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/ma-angela-cruz

Email Contact: angelique.palenzuela@moneygeek.com


Sources