Business insurance premiums have risen across the country — especially for contractors, engineers, architects, and AEC firms. The good news is: you can lower your costs, but the best strategy isn’t “buy less insurance.” The real strategy is improving how your business is underwritten.
Here are 5 practical ways to reduce your premiums while still protecting what you’re building.
1) Clean Up Your Class Codes + Business Description
One of the most common reasons businesses overpay is incorrect classification.
Make sure your agent accurately reflects:
- What you actually do (and what you don’t do)
- Your true mix of operations (design vs construction, install vs consulting, etc.)
- Proper payroll allocations by role
Why this matters: class codes drive pricing more than almost anything else — especially for Workers Comp and General Liability.
2) Tighten Risk Controls (Underwriters Reward This)
Insurance companies price risk. So when your company demonstrates proactive controls, premiums often drop.
Strong examples:
- Written safety program + toolbox talks
- Jobsite checklists / documented inspections
- OSHA compliance and training records
- Subcontractor onboarding requirements
Pro move: Keep these documented. Underwriters will discount businesses that can prove risk controls exist.
3) Reduce Claims Frequency (Even Small Claims Hurt You)
Many businesses assume only “big claims” matter.
Reality: claim frequency can raise premiums dramatically, even if the claims were small.
Ways to reduce frequency:
- Raise your internal “self-pay threshold”
- Improve incident reporting and documentation
- Train foremen/project leads on avoiding minor accidents
Important: fewer claims = better underwriting profile = lower premium over time.
4) Increase Deductibles Strategically (Not Blindly)
A deductible increase is often one of the fastest ways to reduce premium — but you have to do it intelligently.
Great opportunities:
- General Liability deductibles
- Inland Marine / Contractor Equipment
- Property deductibles
Rule of thumb: increase the deductible only to the amount you could comfortably fund tomorrow if something happened.
5) Bundle Policies + Consolidate Carriers
Many companies get quoted “piecemeal” — one carrier for GL, another for PL, another for property.
Often that costs more.
When bundling makes sense:
- BOP instead of separate GL + Property
- Packaging GL + Umbrella
- Keeping multiple coverages with one carrier for credits
Bottom line: fewer carriers can mean more leverage, better pricing, and easier renewals.
Closing Thought
Premium reduction isn’t about finding the cheapest policy — it’s about making your business more attractive to insure.
At Strux Insurance, we help AEC firms and contractors get:
– Properly classified
– Accurately underwritten
– Protected with the right coverage
– Priced fairly

