♨️ Heatsurance Get a Quote

Certificate of Insurance

Certificate of Insurance for HVAC Contractors

A client or GC is asking for your certificate of insurance. Here's what it is, what it needs to show — including completed operations language mechanical jobs often require — and how to get one fast.

✓ Same-day coverage typically available ✓ Instant COI after you bind ✓ Independent agency — multiple carriers ✓ Licensed agents

What Is a Certificate of Insurance?

A certificate of insurance (COI) is a one-page document that summarizes your insurance coverage. It shows the name of your insurance company, your policy numbers, coverage types and limits, policy effective dates, and who's named on the policy. It's not a policy itself — it's proof that a policy exists.

For HVAC contractors specifically, the COI often has to do more work than it does for other trades. Because the exposure includes combustion, gas lines, and refrigerant, the people asking for it — GCs, property managers, permitting offices — tend to scrutinize it more closely than they would for a lighter trade.

What an HVAC Contractor's COI Typically Shows

  • Named insured — Your business name exactly as it appears on your policy
  • General liability coverage — Per occurrence and aggregate limits
  • Completed operations status — Confirms the policy responds to failures discovered after a job is finished, often specifically requested on mechanical and combustion-related jobs
  • Policy effective dates — Start and end date of your current policy
  • Certificate holder — The GC, property manager, or client requesting the COI
  • Additional insured — If required, the name of the party to be added as additional insured
  • Description of operations — For HVAC, this often specifies installation, service, or both, and sometimes references refrigerant handling

Gas Line Work and Municipal Permit Requirements

Any job that touches a gas line — a new furnace hookup, a boiler replacement, a gas line extension — often needs a mechanical or gas permit from the local building department before you can start. Some municipalities ask for proof of insurance as part of that permit application, separate from any COI a GC or homeowner might request. This is a step painters, cleaners, and most other trades never encounter, and it's worth confirming with your local permitting office before you assume your standard client-facing COI is all you need. If a permit office asks for specific language or limits, tell us — we can tailor a certificate for that submission.

Refrigerant Handling and EPA 608 on Your COI

Some COI requesters — particularly commercial mechanical GCs, national retailers with install programs, and larger property management companies — go a step further than most GL requests and ask for confirmation that technicians on the job hold current EPA Section 608 certification. This usually isn't shown on the insurance certificate itself, but it's frequently requested alongside it as a separate document. Keep your techs' certifications current and easy to produce; a COI that shows up without it can still hold up a job if the certification isn't ready to go with it.

Mechanical Room and Rooftop Access Requirements

Getting into a building's mechanical room or onto its roof to service a rooftop unit isn't like walking into an open job site. Building engineers and property managers often gate that access behind their own insurance requirements — sometimes higher limits than a standard residential job, sometimes a waiver of subrogation or primary and non-contributory language specifically because a mistake in a mechanical room can affect the whole building's operations, not just the unit you're working on. If a property manager is slow-walking roof or mechanical room access, an outdated or generic COI is a common reason why. We can turn around an updated certificate the same day.

New Construction vs. Service Call COI Requests

What gets asked of you varies a lot depending on the job. On new construction, you're typically working as a sub under a GC, and they'll want the full package before you're allowed on site: additional insured, waiver of subrogation, often $2M/$4M limits, and completed operations specifically called out given how long an install failure can take to surface. On a one-off residential service call, a homeowner usually won't ask for a COI at all — but a property manager handling a rental will, and increasingly so will HOA-managed communities. The safest approach is having a current COI ready to send at any time rather than scrambling when a job suddenly requires one.

How Fast Can You Get a COI?

Once you're bound with us, your certificate of insurance is issued instantly — ready to download and send to your client, GC, or permitting office the same day. If you need coverage urgently for a job starting tomorrow or even today, same-day coverage is typically available. Fill out the quote form and our agents work quickly to get you covered.

Common COI Requirements from GCs and Property Managers

General contractors and property managers typically require HVAC subcontractors to provide:

  • General liability with limits of at least $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate (some mechanical contracts require $2M/$4M)
  • Completed operations coverage referenced on the certificate, given the tail risk of combustion and refrigerant work
  • The GC or property owner named as additional insured
  • A waiver of subrogation in favor of the GC or property owner
  • Primary and non-contributory language (common on commercial and mechanical-room-access jobs)
  • Workers compensation if you have employees

How to Request a COI

Once you're a client, requesting a COI is simple — contact us with the name and address of the certificate holder and any specific language required, whether that's a GC's standard sub package, a property manager's mechanical-room access requirements, or a municipal permit office's submission format. We issue certificates quickly so you can get to work without delays.

Get your free quote

Our licensed agents build your custom quote — typically same business day.

By submitting, you agree we may contact you about your quote. Consent isn't required to purchase.

FAQ

Common questions

Does a gas permit application need its own proof of insurance?+

Some municipalities ask for it as part of the mechanical or gas permit application, separate from any COI your GC or client requests. Check with your local permitting office, and tell us if they need specific language — we can tailor a certificate for that submission.

Does my COI need to show EPA 608 certification?+

Usually not on the certificate itself, but larger GCs, retailers with install programs, and property management companies often ask for it as a separate document alongside your COI. Keep your techs' certifications current and ready to produce.

Why is a property manager asking for more than my standard COI before I can access the mechanical room?+

Mechanical room and rooftop access often comes with its own insurance requirements — higher limits, waiver of subrogation, or primary and non-contributory language — because a mistake there can affect the whole building. We can turn around an updated certificate the same day.

Do I need a COI for a residential service call, or just for GC jobs?+

A one-off homeowner call usually won't require one, but property managers and HOA-managed communities increasingly do. New construction under a GC almost always requires the full package. Keeping a current COI on hand means you're never scrambling when one's suddenly requested.

Can I get a COI the same day I buy insurance?+

Yes. Once you bind coverage, your COI is issued instantly. Same-day coverage is typically available, so you can often get a policy and COI the same day a job requires it.

Get a quote built for your HVAC business.

Licensed agents build your custom quote — typically same business day. Review, enroll, and get your COI instantly.

Get a Quote