Risk
Skipping insurance doesn't make a tape seam less likely to fail a year from now โ it just changes who's on the hook when it does.
A tape seam either cracks eight months from now or it doesn't, and that outcome has nothing to do with your coverage status. What insurance actually changes is who's writing the check if it does โ for a drywall contractor working uninsured, that check comes straight out of your own pocket instead of a carrier's.
More commercial GCs are treating an active certificate as table stakes just to mobilize a crew, not something they'll circle back to after the fact. Miss that requirement and you're not losing on price or schedule โ you're simply never on the job site to begin with.
An LLC is meant to keep a business problem from becoming a personal one. That separation works best when the business's money and the owner's money are genuinely kept apart โ something plenty of small drywall operations blur without realizing it. An uninsured claim is exactly the moment that blurring gets tested, because there's no policy in the way to make the argument unnecessary.
Because your work gets sealed behind paint and finish almost immediately, drywall claims have a genuinely long tail โ a fire-rated assembly questioned during a later inspection, a tape seam failure discovered a year into occupancy. General liability with completed operations coverage exists specifically because this delayed-discovery pattern is so common in this trade, and an uninsured claim tied to work from years ago can still land on you today.
Even a claim that gets thrown out entirely still runs up legal hours getting there, and someone has to pay for those hours regardless of the outcome. Without a policy behind you, that someone is you.
Uninsured drywall contractors usually aren't making a calculated bet โ a renewal slipped, or the season got busy and it never made it back to the top of the list. A quote takes a few minutes and swaps the guesswork for an actual number. See our cost breakdown for what that number typically looks like.
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FAQ
Increasingly, yes โ an active certificate is often treated as a condition of getting on site at all, not paperwork that gets sorted out once you're already there.
Not reliably. That protection holds up best when business and personal finances are kept genuinely separate, which smaller operations don't always manage โ and a court can look past the LLC when that's the case.
Yes โ drywall defects routinely take months or longer to surface, which is exactly the scenario completed operations coverage is designed to respond to.
Yes โ proving a claim has no merit still takes attorney hours to establish, and that bill lands on you directly without a policy behind you.
A long streak without a claim reflects luck more than safety โ the exposure on your next job is unchanged, and drywall's tendency for delayed-surfacing defects means an old job could still catch up with you.
A quote takes a few minutes and gives you a real number to weigh against everything above.