Waiver of Subrogation for Contractor Insurance

A Waiver of Subrogation (WOS) is contract language that typically asks your insurer to waive certain recovery rights against the GC, owner, or other listed parties after a covered loss, when the policy and endorsements allow it. A COI note alone may not satisfy strict vendor portals or bid packets because many want confirmation through endorsement wording. helps contractors in California and Texas move faster by matching COI and endorsement requests to the exact contract requirement language.

Need this for onboarding or a bid deadline (fast lane)

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What “Waiver of Subrogation” means in plain English

In brief: WOS is about whether an insurer can pursue recovery against certain parties after paying a claim, and a waiver request typically asks the insurer not to pursue that recovery in specific situations, subject to policy terms.

In a construction contract, a waiver of subrogation requirement is usually an attempt to reduce post-loss finger-pointing between the parties on the job. It commonly shows up alongside other compliance requirements.

Mini definitions (quick and extractable)

  • COI (Certificate of Insurance): Proof of coverage and limits on a date. It does not rewrite the policy. →
  • Additional Insured (AI): A status usually granted by endorsement, not created by a COI checkbox. →
  • Primary and Noncontributory (PNC): A requirement about which policy responds first, often supported by endorsement wording. →
  • Waiver of Subrogation (WOS): A requirement that may waive certain recovery rights when endorsed and permitted.

Important: This is general information, not legal advice. Requirements vary by contract, project, and carrier.

Why GCs, owners, and property managers require WOS

In brief: WOS is part of contract risk transfer. The hiring party wants fewer disputes between parties after a loss, and wants the insurance program to align with the contract structure.

You commonly see WOS requests in:

  • Vendor onboarding portals
  • Subcontract agreements with GCs
  • Owner contracts for commercial work
  • Property manager requirements for tenant improvements and ongoing maintenance 

Trades that run into WOS requests constantly:

Where it shows up (COI vs endorsement) and what to verify

Many people look for PNC on the COI, but approvals often depend on whether the right endorsement wording is actually on the policy.
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Step 1: Confirm what the contract is asking for

Ask:

  • Who is the waiver for? (GC, owner, property manager, landlord, etc.)
  • Which policy line? (often general liability and workers’ comp; sometimes auto, depending on contract wording)
  • Is it tied to a written contract requirement? Many policies require a written contract in place for the waiver to apply.

Step 2: Verify COI basics (common rejection points)

  • Insured legal name matches your contract and vendor portal
  • Certificate holder legal name and address are exact
  • Job name and jobsite address included if required
  • Limits and policy dates match the requirement page

Step 3: Verify the endorsement (the part portals care about)

A COI note that says “WOS applies” may not pass strict portals if they expect endorsement support.

What to verify:

  • The policy includes WOS wording or an endorsement that supports it
  • The waiver is granted for the right party (by scheduled name, blanket wording, or contract-based wording, depending on the form)
  • If the contract bundles requirements, confirm AI + PNC + WOS are each handled, not assumed

Related guides:

Common mistakes that delay approval (and how to avoid them)

Most WOS delays are preventable. They come from missing requirement language, wrong entity names, or assuming a COI note replaces endorsement wording.
  1. Not sending the contract requirement language
    Fix: Paste the WOS requirement clause or upload the insurance requirements page.
  2. Wrong entity name for the party requesting WOS
    Fix: Use the legal entity name from the contract or portal.
  3. Assuming the COI checkbox is enough
    Fix: If the portal expects endorsement confirmation, request it explicitly.
  4. Requesting WOS without specifying which policies the contract references
    Fix: Tell us what the contract requires (GL, WC, Auto, Umbrella). Do not guess.
  5. Missing project details when the portal requires them
    Fix: Include job name and jobsite address.
  6. Waiting until the day before mobilization
    Fix: If you have a hard deadline, submit early and include the requirement language.

How to request WOS correctly (copy/paste checklist)

In brief: Speed comes from complete inputs. If we have the party details and exact contract wording, we can align COI and endorsements to what the GC or portal validates.

Provide:

  • Certificate holder: legal name and mailing address
  • Who needs WOS wording: GC/owner/property manager legal name(s)
  • Project: job name and jobsite address
  • Required limits: GL limits (and Umbrella if required)
  • Exact requirement language: paste the contract clause or upload the requirement page
  • Other requirements: Additional Insured, Primary and Noncontributory, any special wording
  • Send-to emails: who needs the COI and any CC list
  • Deadline: bid due date or portal deadline

Existing clients: Request a COI → 
New to us: Get a Quote → 

How we help you meet requirements fast

In brief: We translate contract insurance requirements into the documents and wording that GCs and vendor portals actually validate, without guessing or overpromising.

What you can expect:

  • Clear routing for existing client COI requests vs new coverage quoting
  • Compliance-first handling based on your actual requirement page
  • Trade-aware support for roofing, GCs, and plumbing workflow
  • Independent broker approach with access to multiple carrier
  • Clear guardrails: requirements vary by contract, project, and carrier (and this is not legal advice)

FAQs: Waiver of Subrogation (WOS)

1) What does waiver of subrogation mean?

It is contract language that typically asks an insurer to waive certain recovery rights against specified parties after a covered loss, when allowed by the policy and endorsements.

2) Is WOS satisfied by a COI note or checkbox?

Often not. A COI is proof of coverage at a point in time and does not rewrite the policy. Many portals expect endorsement wording to support WOS.

3) Why do GCs and owners require WOS?

It is part of risk transfer. They want the insurance setup to align with the contract and reduce post-loss disputes between parties.

4) Which policies can WOS apply to?

Commonly general liability and workers’ comp are referenced in construction contracts, and sometimes auto depending on the contract wording. Always share the requirement language.

5) Does WOS require a written contract?

Many policies tie waiver wording to a written contract requirement. The exact rule depends on the carrier and endorsement form.

6) What is the most common reason a COI gets rejected for WOS?

Missing contract wording, wrong entity names, missing job details, or no confirmation that the policy includes the required endorsement language.

7) What other requirements usually show up with WOS?

Additional Insured and Primary and Noncontributory are commonly bundled with WOS in GC and owner contracts.

8) I am not a client yet. Can you issue a COI showing WOS?

A COI requires active coverage. If you are new to us, start with the quote flow so coverage can be placed first.
If your portal says “WOS required” and you are up against a deadline, do not guess.