What Commercial Auto Insurance Is Required in Hawaii?

Hawaii's commercial auto insurance requirements under HRS §431:10C-301 set 40/80/20 split liability minimums for most business vehicles, effective January 1, 2026 (increased from the previous 20/40/10 limits per SB2342 CD1):

  • $40,000 for bodily injury or death of one person per accident
  • $80,000 for bodily injury or death of two or more people per accident
  • $20,000 for property damage per accident

Every registered motor vehicle in Hawaii must also carry $10,000 per person in personal injury protection (PIP), including commercial vehicles. These base minimums apply to standard business vehicles operating locally; businesses that carry passengers for hire, haul cargo over 10,001 lbs or transport hazardous materials must carry higher limits set by state law or federal FMCSA regulations.

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WHEN DOES FEDERAL LAW APPLY OVER HAWAII LAW?

Federal commercial auto insurance requirements override Hawaii state law when your business transports cargo or passengers across state lines, or when you move cargo as part of an interstate shipment even if your leg stays within Hawaii. The federal threshold also applies to any vehicle with a GVWR of 10,001 lbs or more operating in interstate commerce, regardless of cargo type. Confirm which jurisdiction applies to your business through the Hawaii DCCA Insurance Division, FMCSA insurance filing requirements and a licensed insurance professional.

Hawaii Commercial Auto Insurance Requirement Exemptions

Hawaii exempts certain vehicles from standard commercial auto insurance, but the state's no-fault law under HRS §431:10C-301 still requires PIP coverage on most registered motor vehicles. A vehicle that qualifies for an exemption from commercial liability minimums may still need PIP if it operates on any public road.

Vehicle used only for personal (non-business) purposes
Personal auto insurance rules, including mandatory PIP
Farm vehicles not operated on public roads
May not require liability coverage under road-use laws, but PIP still needed if road-registered
Off-road equipment (construction equipment, ATVs) not driven on public highways
Not subject to on-road insurance mandates
Government vehicles covered under authorized self-insurance programs
Government self-insurance statutes
Vehicles not registered for road use (yard-only, private property)
No road-use liability requirement
Mopeds under 49cc
Exempt from standard motor vehicle insurance requirements under HRS §286
Antique vehicles (25+ years, exhibition use only)
Exempt from standard insurance if not used for regular transportation

These requirements apply in full across all Hawaiian islands, including Honolulu, Hilo, Kailua-Kona, Kahului and all four counties. Check with the Hawaii DCCA Insurance Division or a licensed insurance professional in your county if you're unsure whether an exemption covers your vehicle.

Hawaii Commercial Auto Insurance Alternatives

Hawaii permits two alternatives to a standard commercial auto insurance policy for meeting financial responsibility requirements under HRS §431:10C.

  • Self-insurance: The Hawaii Insurance Commissioner can issue self-insurance certificates to businesses that demonstrate sufficient financial resources to cover potential claims. Self-insurance is most common among larger commercial fleets with the financial capacity to absorb claim costs without transferring risk to an insurer.
  • Cash deposit: Businesses can deposit cash or approved securities with the Hawaii Director of Finance in place of a standard policy. The deposit must equal or exceed the minimum liability coverage for the vehicle's use classification, which means at least $80,000 for a standard commercial vehicle under the 2026 minimums.

Special Hawaii Commercial Auto Insurance Coverage Circumstances

Three situations in Hawaii require additional commercial auto coverage or documentation beyond a standard policy.

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    Leased commercial vehicles

    Leasing companies in Hawaii either add lessees to the company's own policy or require the lessee to carry coverage meeting the state's minimums, including PIP. Hawaii's base 40/80/20 liability limits won't cover the full lease balance if your vehicle is totaled. Gap insurance pays the difference between actual cash value (ACV) and your remaining lease amount, and most lessors in Hawaii recommend or require it.

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    Inter-island commercial operations

    Hawaii's multi-island geography creates a coverage gap that no mainland state shares. Standard commercial auto policies cover vehicles while driven or parked on land, but often exclude coverage during barge or ferry transport between islands. If your business ships vehicles between Oahu, Maui, the Big Island or Kauai, verify with your insurer that sea transit is covered or add an inland marine endorsement.

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    No-fault PIP and commercial vehicles

    Hawaii's no-fault system requires $10,000 per person in PIP coverage on most registered motor vehicles, including those used for business. PIP pays medical expenses and lost wages regardless of fault, and a commercial vehicle without PIP is noncompliant even if it carries the correct liability limits. Confirm your policy includes PIP for every registered business vehicle.

Commercial Auto Insurance Enforcement and Penalties in Hawaii

Hawaii law enforcement verifies commercial vehicle insurance during traffic stops by requesting proof of coverage, and the state requires drivers to carry a valid motor vehicle insurance identification card at all times under HRS §431:10C-104. Honolulu has its own commercial vehicle enforcement authority, including additional parking and permitting rules for commercial operators.

First violation
$100–$5,000
License suspension up to 3 months; must surrender plates
Proof of insurance required for reinstatement
Repeat violation (within 5 years)
$100–$5,000 each
1-year license suspension
6-month mandatory insurance policy; community service option
Multiple convictions (within 5 years)
Escalating fines
Extended suspension
Vehicle impoundment or impoundment and sale

Hawaii may require an SR-22 certificate filed by your insurer to reinstate driving privileges after an uninsured vehicle conviction. SR-22 status in Hawaii increases commercial auto insurance premiums for the duration of the filing period.

How to Verify Your Business Meets Hawaii Commercial Auto Insurance Requirements

Follow these steps to confirm your vehicles and operations comply with Hawaii and, where applicable, federal commercial auto insurance rules.

  1. 1

    Identify how each vehicle is used

    Determine whether each vehicle carries passengers, hauls goods or equipment, operates only within Hawaii or connects to an interstate shipment. Hawaii's insurance requirements depend on the vehicle's function, not your business type.

  2. 2

    Check each vehicle's weight rating

    Locate the GVWR on the driver-side door label. Vehicles rated at 10,001 lbs or more that operate in interstate commerce fall under federal FMCSA minimums instead of Hawaii's state requirements.

  3. 3

    Determine whether state or federal rules apply

    Vehicles used exclusively for local Hawaii operations follow the state's 40/80/20 liability minimums. Any vehicle involved in interstate freight or passenger transport, even if your leg never leaves Hawaii, may be subject to federal motor carrier insurance requirements.

  4. 4

    Confirm your liability limits meet the correct requirement

    Standard Hawaii commercial vehicles must carry at least $40,000 bodily injury per person, $80,000 per accident and $20,000 property damage. Passenger carriers and federally regulated vehicles often need much higher limits, up to $5,000,000 CSL for large passenger operations.

  5. 5

    Verify your policy includes PIP coverage

    Hawaii's no-fault law requires $10,000 per person in PIP on most registered motor vehicles, including commercial vehicles. Confirm your policy includes PIP or add a PIP endorsement if it doesn't.

  6. 6

    Verify your policy reflects actual vehicle use

    Confirm your Hawaii commercial auto policy classifies each vehicle correctly, lists all drivers and covers how the vehicle is actually used. A mismatch between your policy's use classification and your real operations can lead to a denied claim.

  7. 7

    Check for inter-island and transit coverage gaps

    If your business moves vehicles between Hawaiian islands by barge or ferry, verify that your policy covers vehicles during sea transit. Most standard commercial auto policies exclude sea transit coverage, and you may need an inland marine endorsement.

  8. 8

    Confirm required registrations and filings

    Hawaii-based interstate carriers need a USDOT number and federal insurance filings. Passenger transport and hazardous materials operations may require additional registration through the Hawaii DCCA or FMCSA.

Hawaii Commercial Auto Insurance Requirements: Bottom Line

Your commercial auto insurance requirements in Hawaii depend on vehicle weight, passenger capacity, cargo type, PIP obligations and whether your operations fall under state or federal jurisdiction. After identifying which category applies to each vehicle, verify that your liability limits, PIP coverage and policy use classifications all match the correct requirement.

Hawaii Commercial Auto Insurance Requirements: Next Steps

Knowing what Hawaii requires is the first step, but legal minimums set a floor, not a ceiling. Your actual coverage needs in Hawaii depend on your financial exposure, the contracts you sign and the liability risks your vehicles carry.

If your goal is just legal compliance

If your vehicles are valuable or highly visible

If you transport passengers

If you haul goods or equipment

If your business signs contracts

About Blest Papio


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Blest Papio is a Content Producer at MoneyGeek specializing in small business insurance. With five years of experience in insurance and finance writing and hands-on perspective as a former business counselor, he understands the risks that come with running a business and what it takes to protect against them.

Blest focuses on commercial auto, cyber, property and specialty business insurance. He digs deep into policy details, regulations and provider offerings so businesses can find the coverage they need and avoid financial fallout. His goal is to translate technical insurance language and insurer offerings into guides you can act on.

Whether you're insuring company vehicles, managing cyber liability or protecting your commercial property, Blest aims to guide you through your risks to help you find coverage you truly need, not sell you a policy.


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