Commercial auto coverage matters when vehicles support the business, whether they are owned by the company, leased, hired, or driven by employees.
What to know when vehicles support the business
Colorado businesses that use vehicles for work should review commercial auto coverage for owned vehicles, leased vehicles, hired autos, and employee-owned vehicles used on company errands. The exposure is not limited to trucking companies. Contractors, sales teams, consultants, healthcare providers, restaurants, delivery operations, mobile service businesses, and professional firms can all create business auto liability.
Owned vehicles and employee vehicles are different problems
Company-owned trucks, vans, cars, and trailers usually belong on a commercial auto policy. Employee-owned vehicles used for errands, client visits, deliveries, or jobsite travel may require hired-and-non-owned auto liability to protect the business from claims. Personal auto policies often have business-use limitations that owners do not notice until after a loss.
Colorado roads create specific exposure
I-25 connects many Front Range business routes, while I-70 creates mountain corridor exposure for contractors, delivery vehicles, hospitality suppliers, and service firms. CDOT publishes winter driving resources and current road-condition references because weather, traction laws, closures, and mountain travel affect safety and timing.
Physical damage matters when the vehicle creates revenue
Comprehensive and collision coverage deserve attention in Colorado because hail, theft, vandalism, wildlife collisions, road debris, and winter accidents can affect both fleets and single work vehicles. If a business depends on a truck, van, or service car to earn revenue, the downtime can be more disruptive than the repair bill itself.
Fleet controls affect underwriting
Driver screening, motor vehicle record review, vehicle maintenance, garaging, radius of operation, telematics, safety training, and accident reporting all shape the underwriting story. A local Denver sales vehicle, a Colorado Springs contractor truck, and a Western Slope delivery route should not be explained to carriers the same way.
Contracts and limits should be reviewed together
Commercial auto is often reviewed with general liability and umbrella coverage when contracts require higher liability limits. A contractor entering a jobsite, a supplier delivering to mountain resorts, or a service company crossing multiple counties may need proof of auto coverage before work begins.