Virginia Home Renovation & Remodeling Contractor Insurance
From Hampton Roads coastal rebuilds facing 130-mph design wind speeds to older housing stock in Richmond and Arlington, Virginia remodelers work across some of the most varied building-code and licensing conditions on the East Coast. A tiered DPOR license system tied directly to project dollar value makes matching your license class to your work mix a real operational decision, not paperwork.
Carriers We Represent
Why Virginia Home Renovation & Remodeling Contractors Need Specialized Coverage
Virginia's remodeling risk splits geographically: coastal wind exposure in Hampton Roads, inland terrain and code differences toward the Blue Ridge, and a three-tier license system that governs which jobs a contractor can even bid. Coastal Virginia adds a distinct wind exposure: under the Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code, Hampton Roads properties within 1,500 feet of open water fall into Wind Exposure Category D with design wind speeds up to 130 mph, driving enhanced fastening, sealed roof decks, and impact-rated coverings on storm-recovery remodels. Older housing stock throughout Richmond, Norfolk, and Arlington adds another layer: renovations disturbing painted surfaces built before 1978 trigger federal lead-paint rules regardless of your primary trade.
It also has to fit Virginia's dollar-value-tiered licensing system, its 3-employee workers’ comp threshold, and a heavy reliance on subcontractors, all of which shape what a remodeling program needs to cover.
Virginia Licensing, Compliance & Requirements for Home Renovation & Remodeling Contractors
Virginia's Board for Contractors ties license class directly to the dollar value of the work, so remodelers who take on a bigger renovation than their class allows are operating outside their license. Confirm current thresholds before bidding.
- Class C license: single-project contracts between $1,000 and $9,999, capped at $150,000 in total annual volume
- Class B license: single-project contracts between $10,000 and $119,999, or annual volume between $150,000 and $749,999
- Class A license: single-project contracts of $120,000 or more, or annual volume of $750,000 or more
- Most remodelers also carry the Residential Building specialty designation on top of their class
- Workers’ comp is required once a contractor, counting its own employees plus subcontractors' employees, regularly has more than two workers
- Pre-1978 home renovations fall under the federal EPA RRP Rule; Virginia runs no state-authorized program, so the federal rule applies directly
Core Coverages for Virginia Home Renovation & Remodeling Contractors
Virginia remodeling contractors typically combine general liability and completed-operations coverage with builders risk and subcontractor-default protection, since renovation work often runs alongside occupied structures and existing systems — and, for Hampton Roads coastal projects, alongside the wind-rated construction standards that apply in Exposure Category D zones.
- General liability for property damage and bodily injury during demolition, structural, and finish work
- Completed-operations coverage for issues that surface after the renovation is finished — settling, leaks, or system failures
- Builders risk / installation floater covering materials and work-in-progress on remodel sites
- Workers’ compensation for crews and, where applicable, corporate officers
- Commercial auto for trucks and trailers moving materials and debris between jobsites
- Tools and equipment (inland marine) for saws, compressors, and power tools on site or in transit
- Contractors pollution liability or lead endorsement for pre-1978 renovation work triggering EPA RRP
- Umbrella liability for the added severity exposure of whole-home and structural remodel projects
What Drives Home Renovation & Remodeling Contractor Insurance Costs in Virginia
There is no single rate. Virginia remodeling contractor premiums move with the levers below — including which DPOR license class you hold and whether your work touches coastal wind-zone requirements — and understanding them helps you control cost without underinsuring.
| Business Size | General Liability | Workers’ Comp | Commercial Auto | Est. Annual Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solo remodeler (owner-operator) | $1,750–$3,100/yr | $1,250–$2,100/yr | $950–$1,650/yr | $3,900–$6,750/yr |
| Small crew (2–5 employees) | $2,800–$5,800/yr | $5,000–$10,000/yr | $2,200–$4,000/yr | $10,000–$19,800/yr |
| Established company (6+ employees, whole-home/structural remodels) | $5,800–$10,500/yr | $10,000–$19,000/yr | $4,000–$8,000/yr | $19,800–$37,500/yr |
Estimated ranges based on industry-standard general contractor benchmark data, adjusted for Virginia's tiered DPOR license classes and Hampton Roads coastal wind exposure. Actual premiums vary by claims history, payroll, revenue, and license class.
- Payroll and annual revenue, the primary exposure base for general liability and workers’ comp once you cross the 2-employee threshold
- Whether your Class A, B, or C license matches the project value of the work you're bidding
- Pre-1978 renovation mix, which can add lead-exposure endorsement costs
- Coastal wind-zone exposure for Hampton Roads and Tidewater remodel projects
- Vehicle count and radius of operation for the commercial auto line
- Claims history and completed-operations exposure from prior remodel projects
Why Virginia Home Renovation & Remodeling Contractors Choose The Allen Thomas Group
As an independent, family-owned agency, we place Virginia remodeling contractors across more than fifteen A-rated carriers rather than pushing one company’s product. Remodeling appetite varies by carrier, especially around DPOR license class, coastal wind exposure, and lead-paint risk, so we match your license tier and work mix to the markets that price it best.
- Independent access to 15+ A-rated carriers, matched to your Class A, B, or C license and renovation work mix
- Family-owned guidance since 2003 with an A+ BBB rating, focused on closing the completed-operations gaps remodelers miss
- Hands-on help with DPOR licensing thresholds, EPA RRP compliance, and Virginia's 2-employee workers’ comp trigger
- Coordinated programs across general liability, builders risk, tools, auto, and pollution/lead endorsements — including coastal wind-zone considerations for Hampton Roads work
- Certificates of insurance and additional-insured endorsements issued fast for GCs and property managers
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a license for remodeling work in Virginia?
Yes, and the class depends on project value: Class C covers contracts up to $9,999 (capped at $150,000 annual volume), Class B covers $10,000–$119,999 per project or up to $749,999 annually, and Class A covers anything larger. Confirm your threshold with DPOR before bidding a job outside your class.
Is workers' compensation required for my remodeling crew?
Yes, once you regularly have more than two employees — and for contractors, that count includes your subcontractors' employees, not just your own direct hires.
What insurance do I need on file to get licensed in Virginia?
Most Virginia licensing bodies require proof of general liability insurance, and many also require a surety bond, before issuing or renewing a license. Exact minimums vary by license class.
Does remodeling a pre-1978 home trigger special insurance requirements?
Yes. Pre-1978 renovations fall under the federal EPA RRP Rule. Virginia has not established its own state-run authorization program, so the federal rule and certified-firm requirement apply directly — relevant on a meaningful share of remodel work in Richmond, Norfolk, and Northern Virginia's older housing stock.
What coverage handles a problem that shows up after the renovation is done?
That's completed-operations coverage, typically written within general liability. It responds when finished work later causes damage — a settling issue, a leak, or a system failure that surfaces after the crew leaves.
Am I responsible for my subcontractors' work?
You can be, which is why tracking subcontractor certificates of insurance and requiring additional-insured status on their policies is a standard part of a remodeling contractor's risk management, alongside your own general liability coverage.
What drives the cost of remodeling contractor insurance in Virginia?
Payroll and employee count, your license scope, pre-1978 renovation mix, subcontractor reliance, vehicle count, and claims history all factor in. As an independent agency we shop multiple carriers to match those drivers.
What if I run both residential and light commercial remodeling work?
Mixed residential/commercial remodeling should confirm your license scope covers both segments and that coverage limits match the larger commercial exposure. As an independent, family-owned agency licensed to write in Virginia, we can structure a program that follows your crews across both segments. Call us at (440) 826-3676.
Protect Your Virginia Home Renovation & Remodeling Contractor Business
We compare more than fifteen A-rated carriers to build remodeling contractor coverage around your crew, your subcontractors, and your Virginia jobsites — including the completed-operations and lead-exposure gaps others miss.