Workers’ Compensation Insurance for Roofing Contractors in Texas

Workers’ compensation helps cover medical costs and wage replacement when an employee is injured on the job. For Texas roofing contractors, it is also a common bid and vendor requirement, especially when you work under a GC or on public projects. We shop multiple carriers, help you set payroll and class codes correctly, prepare for audits, and turn around COIs and common endorsements fast so you can start work without delays.

What workers’ comp covers for roofers in Texas

In brief: Roofing is high-severity work. Workers’ comp is built for job injuries and the admin workflow that follows.

Workers’ compensation is designed to respond to employee injuries that happen in the course of work. For roofers, that typically means incidents tied to heights and physical jobsite conditions, such as:

  • Falls from ladders, roof edges, and scaffolding
  • Slips and trips during tear-off and material staging
  • Nail gun and cutting tool injuries
  • Heat stress and dehydration during long summer days
  • Strains from carrying bundles and moving debris

A typical workers’ comp setup also includes employers liability (often shown on the certificate), and it can be required even when the job is otherwise “small,” like a retail reroof or residential replacement.

What it is not: Workers’ comp does not replace general liability. GL is for third-party claims (property damage and injury to others). See

Texas-specific reality: coverage is optional for many private employers, but requirements show up anyway

In brief: In Texas, the contract often drives the requirement. You can lose jobs if you cannot prove coverage.
Texas is different from most states. Many private employers are not required to carry workers’ compensation coverage. That said, roofers still buy it for two practical reasons:

What affects workers’ comp cost for Texas roofing contractors

In brief: Premium is mostly payroll-driven, but roofing operations and admin accuracy decide how smooth renewals and audits will be.

Pricing varies by carrier appetite and your specifics. The biggest drivers for Texas roofers are:

Payroll and job duties (the real driver)

Workers’ comp is largely rated on payroll, and it matters who is on the roof versus who is in the office.

Class codes and role clarity

Roofing payroll is not “one bucket” in real life. Underwriters and auditors care about the difference between:

  • Roofer laborers and installers
  • Foremen and supervisors who still do field work
  • Warehouse and yard staff
  • Office and admin

If the job duties are unclear, audits get messy and premiums change.

Claims history and experience modification (when applicable)

Frequent small claims can hurt as much as one large claim. Carriers price both severity and frequency.

Residential storm work vs commercial work mix

Storm volume can change hiring, supervision, and jobsite controls. Carriers often want to understand how you scale crews and maintain safety during high demand.

Subcontractor usage and documentation discipline

Roofing often runs on subs. Your workers’ comp exposure can change depending on:

  • Whether subs carry their own workers’ comp
  • Whether you collect COIs consistently
  • How your subcontract agreements are structured
  • Whether “labor-only” crews show up during storm spikes

Audit readiness

Workers’ comp is commonly audited against actual payroll and job duties. A clean process prevents surprises. See: premium-audit and contractor-class-codes

1) GCs, owners, and vendor portals commonly require workers’ comp proof

Even when the state does not mandate coverage for a private job, many GCs and commercial clients require a COI showing workers’ comp as part of bid packets and onboarding.

2) Public projects can require workers’ comp on the job

On building or construction contracts with a governmental entity, requirements can apply to contractors and subcontractors working the public project.
If you do public work (or you sub under someone who does), assume the compliance paperwork will ask for workers’ comp proof early.

3) If you opt out, Texas has a “non-subscriber” framework

Texas employers that do not carry workers’ comp can face a very different risk profile and notice obligations.
We are not giving legal advice, but from a roofing business standpoint, the key point is simple: many jobs still require proof of workers’ comp, and clients often do not want to hear “we do not carry it.”

Bid and compliance requirements (COI + endorsements)

In brief: Most delays come from missing COIs, incorrect certificate holder details, or a waiver request that was not ordered early.

What you are usually asked for

  • COI showing workers’ compensation (and employers liability limits)
  • Correct certificate holder name and address, exactly as shown in the contract
  • Effective dates that cover the job start window
  • Sometimes a workers’ comp Waiver of Subrogation (WOS) endorsement

Quick definitions (so you can move faster):

  • COI: Certificate of Insurance. Proof of coverage, not the policy itself.
  • Endorsement: A form that changes the policy terms.
  • WOS: Waiver of Subrogation. Often requested by GCs and owners in higher-control contracts.
  • Audit: Carrier review of payroll and operations to reconcile premium.
  • Class code: Classification used for rating and audits.

Helpful internal references:

COI fast lane (how to avoid back-and-forth)

If you need workers’ comp proof for a roofing job, send:

  1. The insurance exhibit page (or the portal checklist)
  2. Certificate holder details exactly as required
  3. Whether the contract specifically asks for WOS
  4. Job name and start date

Turnaround expectation: When coverage is active and the request is clear, COIs can often be issued quickly during business hours.

In brief: The fastest quotes happen when payroll, roles, and subcontractor usage are clear from day one.

Send what you have. Estimates are fine to start.

Business basics

  • Legal entity name and maili
    in business
  • Where you work in Texas (DFW, Houston, San Antonio, Austin, statewide storm response, etc.)

Payroll and staffing

  • Estimated annual payroll by role (field roofers, foremen, office)
  • Number of employees
  • Any seasonal hiring patterns
  • Whether owners are on tools (and how often)

Roofing operations (trade-specific underwriting detail)

  • Residential vs commercial split
  • Tear-offs frequency and cleanup process
  • Max typical roof height and any steep-slope concentration
  • Flat roofing details (and whether any hot work is involved)
  • Storm work percentage and how you supervise crews during surge periods

Subcontractors

  • Estimated subcontractor percentage
  • Whether you collect COIs from subs (and how you store them)
  • Whether you require subs to carry workers’ comp and GL
  • Whether you use written subcontract agreements

Prior coverage and claims

  • Current or prior workers’ comp carrier (if applicable)
  • Loss history (if available) and any open claims
  • Target start date for the new policy

Common scenarios (Texas roofing workers’ comp)

In brief: These are the two situations that most often create delays or premium surprises for roofers.

Scenario 1: The GC requires workers’ comp proof before mobilization

You win a commercial reroof, but the GC will not let you start without a COI showing workers’ comp and employers liability, and sometimes a waiver of subrogation. You are tight on schedule, and the vendor portal rejects incomplete certificates.

How to handle it:

  • Request the COI as soon as the contract is signed
  • Provide the insurance exhibit page, not a screenshot of a portal error
  • Verify whether WOS is required and which party needs to be listed
  • If you need same-week mobilization, note “urgent compliance” on so it is routed correctly 

Scenario 2: Subcontractor crews create an audit problem

During storm season, you bring on multiple subcontractor crews. At audit, the carrier asks for COIs for every sub. Missing certificates can lead to subcontractor costs being treated as payroll in lates premium.

How to handle it:

  • Set a hard rule: no work starts without the sub’s COI on file
  • Track certificates in a simple folder structure by project and vendor
  • Use written subcontract agreements that match your insurance process
  • Build a repeatable workflow using subcontractor-insurance-compliance and premium-audit

FAQs: Workers’ comp for roofers in Texas

1) Do Texas roofing contractors have to carry workers’ comp?

Texas is unusual. Many private employers are not required to carry workers’ compensation.
However, many GCs and owners still require proof of workers’ comp by contract, and public projects can have specific requirements.

2) What do GCs usually want to see on the COI?

Most want active workers’ comp plus employers liability limits, correct certificate holder details, and effective dates that cover the job.

3) What is a waiver of subrogation and why does it come up?

A waiver of subrogation is an endorsement that can be required by certain contracts. If your contract asks for WOS, the endorsement must be issued on the policy, not just typed onto the COI.

4) Can I get a COI quickly for a bid deadline?

Often yes, once coverage is active and we have the exact certificate holder information. Existing clients should use.

5) Does workers’ comp cover subcontractors?

It depends on how the job is structured, what documentation exists, and what coverage the subs carry. Practically, you should collect COIs from subs and keep them organized. See

6) What causes workers’ comp premium surprises?

The most common cause is the audit. Payroll changes, job duty changes, or missing subcontractor certificates can trigger adjustments. See

7) How do class codes affect roofing workers’ comp?

Class codes connect job duties to rating. If payroll is assigned to the wrong role, you can get hit at audit or have trouble with carrier eligibility. See

8) What if I do mostly storm work after hail events?

Carriers often want to understand your storm percentage, how you supervise new crews, and whether you use subs heavily during surge periods. Share that up front to avoid re-underwriting later.

9) What about owners who work in the field?

Owner treatment varies by structure and carrier. Tell us whether owners are on tools and how often so the policy is built correctly.

10) Is workers’ comp the only way to meet job requirements in Texas?

Some businesses explore alternatives, but many contracts specifically require workers’ compensation insurance and a COI that shows it. When the contract is explicit, the simplest path is usually to meet the requirement as written.

Get a workers’ comp quote for your Texas roofing business