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GL vs. BOP

General Liability vs. Business Owner's Policy (BOP) for Handymen

Both start with the same general liability coverage โ€” the real difference is what gets bundled around it, and whether you actually need what's in the bundle.

โœ“ Same-day coverage typical โœ“ Multiple carriers shopped โœ“ Instant COI after binding โœ“ Licensed agents

They Start From the Same Place

A Business Owner's Policy (BOP) isn't a competitor to general liability โ€” it's general liability plus additional coverage bundled into one package. Every BOP has a GL policy inside it. The real question isn't "GL or BOP," it's whether the extra coverage bundled into a BOP is something your handyman business actually needs.

What a BOP Adds on Top of GL

Commercial Property Coverage

If you have a shop, a storage unit, or an office with tools, inventory, or equipment stored on-site (separate from what travels in your truck, which is typically its own tools and equipment coverage), a BOP's property coverage protects that physical location and its contents against fire, theft, and other covered property risks.

Business Income (Interruption) Coverage

If a covered event โ€” a fire at your shop, for instance โ€” shuts down your ability to operate, business income coverage can replace lost revenue during the rebuild or repair period. For a mobile handyman business with no fixed location, this piece is often far less relevant than it would be for, say, a retail business.

The Question That Actually Decides This: Do You Have a Shop?

This is the single biggest factor. A handyman who works entirely out of a truck, with tools that travel with them and no separate physical location, usually has little practical use for the property and business income pieces of a BOP โ€” standalone general liability plus tools and equipment coverage covers the real exposure. A handyman with a dedicated shop, storage unit, or office โ€” especially one holding meaningful inventory or equipment value โ€” starts to have a real property exposure that a BOP is built to address.

Why a BOP Is Sometimes Cheaper Than Buying Both Separately

Carriers often price a bundled BOP at a discount compared to buying standalone GL and a separate commercial property policy individually, since underwriting and administering one package costs the carrier less than two. If you determine you do need both GL and property coverage, it's worth getting a BOP quoted specifically to see whether the bundle beats the sum of its parts โ€” we can typically do this for handymen, so it's worth asking about even if you're not sure yet.

When Standalone GL Still Makes More Sense

If you don't have a fixed location, don't carry significant business property beyond what's already covered under tools and equipment, and don't have meaningful business-interruption exposure, adding a BOP's extra pieces is usually just added premium for coverage you're unlikely to use. Standalone GL, sized correctly for your scope of work, is often the leaner and more cost-effective choice in that case.

A Note on Multi-Trade Handyman Risk Specifically

Because handyman work already spans a range of trades under one GL policy (see our cost breakdown for how scope affects pricing), the GL side of a BOP for a handyman needs the same scope-of-work accuracy as a standalone policy would. Bundling into a BOP doesn't change how the underlying GL risk is assessed โ€” it's still priced off what you actually do.

Getting Both Quoted Side by Side

If you're on the fence, the fastest way to decide is to get standalone GL and a bundled BOP quoted against each other for your specific situation โ€” shop or no shop, current equipment value, and scope of work. The dollar difference (or lack of one) usually makes the decision obvious once you see it. Our contractor coverage page covers related structuring questions if you're also managing a crew.

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FAQ

Common questions

If I don't have a shop, is there any reason to still consider a BOP?+

Generally no โ€” if you have no fixed location and minimal business property beyond what tools and equipment coverage already handles, standalone GL sized to your scope of work is usually the better fit.

Does a BOP replace the need for tools and equipment coverage in my truck?+

Not automatically. A BOP's property coverage is typically built around a fixed location; tools and equipment that travel with you often still need to be addressed specifically, either within the BOP or as a separate rider โ€” worth confirming exactly what's covered where.

Can Handysurance actually place a BOP for handymen, or just standalone GL?+

We can typically place BOP coverage for handymen who have a qualifying location and property exposure โ€” tell us about your setup on the quote form and we'll confirm fit.

Is a BOP always cheaper than buying GL and property coverage separately?+

Often, but not universally โ€” it depends on your specific risk profile and the carrier's pricing. Getting both quoted side by side for your situation is the only way to know for sure.

What happens to my BOP if I close my shop and go fully mobile?+

You'd want to update your policy to reflect that change โ€” carrying property and business income coverage for a location you no longer operate is a cost with no corresponding benefit, and your agent can requote you as a standalone GL policy instead.

Get GL and a bundled BOP quoted side by side.

Tell us about your setup โ€” shop or fully mobile โ€” and we'll quote both so the decision is obvious, not a guess.

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