While a multi-million dollar suspension bridge is anchored to a physical location, it is insured under inland marine because it serves as an instrument of transportation.
Traditional property insurance anchors itself to a fixed coordinate. If a building catches fire, the policy covers it because the property is physically bound to the address listed on the declarations page. But human commerce and daily life are inherently kinetic. High-value assets cross borders, construction machinery travels between temporary job sites, and billions of dollars in freight move constantly.
To insure this kinetic world, the insurance industry relies on inland marine insurance. The name itself sounds like a contradiction. How can something be "inland" and "marine"? Historically, ocean marine insurance protected cargo aboard ships. But what happened when that cargo was unloaded at the docks and loaded onto trains or wagons? Inland marine insurance originated to cover these goods transported over land. Over the decades, it evolved from protecting stagecoaches and trains to serving as the insurance industry's definitive solution for anything that is highly mobile. Today, inland marine insurance protects movable property and property in transit.
Early intermodal freight transport, such as this diligence (stagecoach) being transferred to a railroad car, represented the precise kinetic risks that inland marine insurance was created to cover once goods left the ocean vessels.
As an aspiring producer, you will use inland marine policies constantly. When a client buys an expensive necklace, when a local contractor buys a new backhoe, or when a dry cleaner opens a new storefront, you will turn to inland marine.
The Nationwide Marine Definition is a standard guideline established by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. Its purpose is highly specific: it classifies the specific types of risks eligible for marine insurance. According to this NAIC framework, eligible inland marine risks are grouped into four primary categories:
Domestic Shipments: Goods traveling via truck, train, or air within the country.
Personal Property Floater Risks: Highly mobile personal assets (like cameras, jewelry, or fine art) owned by individuals.
Commercial Property Floater Risks: Movable business assets, from construction equipment to specialized medical devices.
Instruments of Transportation and Communication: This category is uniquely fascinating. Bridges and tunnels are classified as instruments of transportation under inland marine insurance. While a bridge cannot "move," it facilitates movement, making it eligible. Similarly, radio and television towers are eligible for inland marine insurance coverage because they facilitate the movement of information (communication).
Under the Nationwide Marine Definition, radio and communication antenna farms are classified as "instruments of communication." Because they facilitate the movement of information, they are strictly eligible for inland marine coverage despite being fixed structures.
Within inland marine, you will hear the term "floater" constantly. Inland marine policies are commonly referred to as floaters. The term floater indicates that the insurance coverage moves with the property to different locations.
Because floaters protect items out in the unpredictable, moving world, named perils (like fire, lightning, or windstorm) are insufficiently narrow. Consequently, inland marine policies are typically written on an open perils basis. This means every risk of direct physical loss is covered unless explicitly excluded (such as wear and tear, inherent vice, or war).
Filed vs. Non-Filed Forms
Before we examine specific policies, we must understand how inland marine forms are created and regulated.
Filed inland marine forms feature standardized rates and language established by rating bureaus (like ISO). Because the data for things like musical instruments or camera equipment is vast and predictable, these forms are filed with state insurance departments and standardized.
Non-filed inland marine forms, by contrast, are used for highly unique or varying risks (like a specialized tunnel project or a massive art installation). Many commercial inland marine insurance policies are written on non-filed forms. These non-filed inland marine forms allow insurers flexibility to negotiate rates and customize coverage for unique risks without strictly adhering to pre-approved state templates.
When you insure a homeowner, standard policies severely limit coverage for theft of jewelry, furs, and firearms. To properly protect your client's wealth, you will turn to personal inland marine floaters.
The Personal Articles Floater (PAF)
A Personal Articles Floater provides open perils coverage for scheduled high-value personal property. "Scheduled" means each item is specifically listed with its own insured value.
Target Items: Jewelry and furs are commonly insured under a Personal Articles Floater. Furthermore, fine arts and musical instruments are frequently scheduled on a Personal Articles Floater.
Geographic Scope: Because wealthy clients travel, a Personal Articles Floater typically provides worldwide coverage for the scheduled items.
Underwriting and Claims: Due to the high limits and open perils nature, insurers usually require a professional appraisal to schedule an item on a Personal Articles Floater. This establishes the value before a loss occurs. If that $15,000 diamond ring drops into the ocean, the claims process is exceptionally clean. In fact, to provide a premium client experience, a Personal Articles Floater typically does not require the policyholder to pay a deductible for a claim.
Unscheduled and Travel Floaters
While the PAF is for specific, scheduled items, two other personal floaters serve broader purposes:
Floater Type
Purpose
Key Characteristic
Personal Property Floater
Provides open perils coverage for unscheduled personal property on a worldwide basis.
Covers the general contents of a home, but anywhere in the world, often used by high-net-worth individuals requiring broader coverage than a standard HO policy.
Personal Effects Floater
Provides coverage for a traveler's luggage and personal items.
Commonly known as a tourist floater, it covers items usually worn or carried by travelers. Note: It generally excludes tickets, passports, and currency.
For commercial clients, moving goods is the lifeblood of their business. If a truck overturns, standard commercial property policies (bound to a fixed address) will not respond. You must issue specialized transit coverages.
Annual Transit Policy: Imagine a manufacturing plant that ships out electronics daily. An Annual Transit policy covers all incoming and outgoing domestic shipments of a business during the policy year. This keeps the insured from having to report every individual truckload to the insurer.
Trip Transit Policy: Conversely, imagine a local business purchasing a one-off, massive printing press from two states away. A Trip Transit policy covers a single specified shipment of goods from an origin point to a destination.
Motor Truck Cargo Policy: The transit policies above are for the owners of the goods. But what about the trucking company itself? A Motor Truck Cargo policy covers freight in transit on commercial trucks. It protects the trucker's legal liability for the damage or destruction of the cargo they are hauling for others.
A standard commercial property policy bound to a fixed address will not cover assets destroyed in a trucking accident, necessitating specialized inland marine transit or motor truck cargo policies to protect the shipment owner or the liable carrier.
Contractors represent a massive percentage of commercial inland marine premiums. Standard commercial property insurance is practically useless for a bulldozer that spends its life moving from highway project to housing development.
The Contractor's Equipment Floater
This is arguably the most common commercial inland marine policy. A Contractor's Equipment Floater covers heavy machinery used by construction professionals (cranes, excavators, earthmovers). The beauty of this policy lies in its kinetic nature:
A Contractor's Equipment Floater covers tools and equipment while in transit.
A Contractor's Equipment Floater covers construction equipment situated at temporary job sites.
A Contractor's Equipment Floater covers heavy mobile machinery, like this backhoe loader, whether it is actively in transit between locations or situated at a temporary construction site.
Source: Backhoe and loader by fir0002 flagstaffotos [at] gmail.com Canon 20D + Tamron 28-75mm f/2.8, GFDL 1.2.
The Installation Floater
While a Contractor's Equipment Floater protects the tools doing the work, what protects the materials being installed?
Scenario: An HVAC contractor is lifting a $150,000 commercial air conditioning unit onto the roof of a new shopping mall. A strap snaps, and the unit plummets to the ground.
An Installation Floater covers machinery and materials being installed by a contractor. It protects the value of the materials during transport, while waiting at the job site, and during the actual installation process. Crucially, an Installation Floater provides coverage until the buyer formally accepts the completed installation. Once the building owner signs off that the HVAC system is installed and working, the risk transfers to the building owner's commercial property policy.
An Installation Floater protects expensive machinery and materials, such as this commercial rooftop HVAC unit, during transport and installation until the buyer formally accepts the completed work.
The Equipment Dealers Floater
Consider the dealership that sells those excavators and tractors. An Equipment Dealers Floater covers the inventory of dealers selling mobile agricultural equipment. Similarly, an Equipment Dealers floater covers the inventory of dealers selling mobile construction equipment. This form protects the dealer’s stock, whether it is sitting on the lot, out on a test drive, or in transit to a buyer.
Inland marine also scoops up several unique commercial property risks that defy traditional categorization.
Bailee's Customer Policies
A "bailee" is someone entrusted with the property of another person. When you drop your suit off for dry cleaning, the cleaner becomes a bailee. Standard commercial property insurance excludes the personal property of others. Therefore, a Bailee's Customer policy covers customer property in the care, custody, or control of the insured business. Because losing a customer's property destroys business reputation, dry cleaners frequently purchase a Bailee's Customer policy to cover damage to customer clothing, regardless of whether the dry cleaner was actually negligent.
Because standard commercial property policies exclude the personal property of others, dry cleaners rely on Bailee's Customer policies to insure their clients' clothing while it is in their care, custody, or control.
Jewelers face extraordinarily concentrated, highly mobile risks. A Jewelers Block policy covers the inventory of retail jewelers. It is a robust, open-perils package designed specifically for the diamond and watch trade. But jewelers also repair watches and resize rings owned by their customers. Therefore, a Jewelers Block policy covers the property of others entrusted to a jeweler, effectively acting as a bailee coverage built directly into the block form.
The Information Age: EDP and Paper Records
Long before "cyber insurance" existed, inland marine policies adapted to protect information.
Electronic Data Processing (EDP) Floater: An Electronic Data Processing floater covers business computer hardware and software. More importantly, it goes beyond the physical server. An Electronic Data Processing floater covers the financial cost to restore lost or damaged digital data—a critical distinction from standard property policies that treat data as intangible and uninsurable.
Accounts Receivable Floater: If a fire burns down a medical clinic's billing department, they lose the physical ledgers detailing who owes them money. An Accounts Receivable floater covers amounts a business cannot collect due to the physical destruction of billing records.
Valuable Papers and Records Floater: If an architectural firm loses physical blueprints in a flood, standard property insurance only pays for the cost of blank paper. A Valuable Papers and Records floater covers the cost to research and reproduce vital damaged business documents.
If physical documents like these naval blueprints are destroyed, a standard property policy covers only the cost of blank paper. A Valuable Papers and Records floater covers the extensive labor and research costs required to reproduce the information.
Signs Coverage
Finally, consider a massive, intricate neon sign hanging over a city street. Standard commercial property policies place strict sub-limits on outdoor signs. Because they are highly vulnerable to weather and vandalism, Signs coverage forms specifically insure neon, automatic, and mechanical signs against physical damage.
Because they are highly vulnerable to weather and vandalism, expensive and intricate outdoor neon signs typically require dedicated inland marine sign coverage.
When you pass your licensing exam and sit across from a client, you must look at their assets through the lens of physics. If an asset is tied to a foundation, you write a standard property policy. But the moment that asset goes onto a truck, is handed to a dry cleaner, travels to Europe, or gets beamed from a television tower, it enters the domain of Inland Marine. Mastering these floaters is how you bridge the gap between fixed locations and a world in constant motion.