Setting up commercial insurance isn’t just about choosing general liability and calling it a day.
In Michigan, there are state-specific regulations, climate risks, workforce realities, and industry patterns that directly affect how your commercial coverage should be structured.
If you operate a business in Michigan — whether you’re in construction, manufacturing, retail, healthcare, hospitality, or professional services — here are the critical considerations you should understand before finalizing your coverage.
1. Michigan’s No-Fault Auto System Impacts Commercial Vehicles
Michigan has one of the most unique auto insurance systems in the country.
While reforms in recent years have changed personal auto coverage, commercial auto policies still operate within Michigan’s no-fault framework.
What Michigan businesses should know:
- Commercial vehicles must carry Michigan-required Personal Injury Protection (PIP) unless properly structured otherwise.
- Businesses that allow employees to use personal vehicles for company purposes may create exposure through hired and non-owned auto liability.
- Fleet vehicles garaged in different Michigan cities can affect rating due to territory factors.
- Out-of-state operations can create conflicts between Michigan no-fault requirements and other state liability structures.
If your company owns vehicles, uses employee vehicles, or transports goods or tools, this is not an area to gloss over.
2. Freeze-Thaw Cycles Create Unique Property Risks
Michigan’s climate is not just “cold.” It’s volatile.
Rapid freeze-thaw cycles increase the risk of:
- Roof damage and structural stress
- Ice dam formation
- Foundation cracking
- Underground pipe ruptures
- Water intrusion during spring melt
Commercial property policies vary in how they address:
- Water damage exclusions
- Roof age limitations
- Ordinance and law coverage (important for older buildings common in Michigan downtown districts)
- Business interruption triggered by utility failure or structural collapse
If your building is more than 20 years old — or located in a historic district — ordinance and law coverage becomes especially important due to Michigan building code updates.
3. Michigan Workers’ Compensation Is Mandatory (With Specific Thresholds)
Under Michigan law:
- Most employers with one or more employees working 35+ hours per week for 13 weeks or longer must carry workers’ compensation.
- Employers with three or more employees at any time must carry coverage.
Key Michigan considerations:
- Construction and manufacturing sectors often experience higher classification rates.
- Independent contractor misclassification can trigger significant penalties.
- Seasonal work patterns common in Michigan (landscaping, construction, hospitality) must still be properly documented.
Workers’ comp audits are common — and payroll misclassification can result in large premium adjustments.
Understanding classification codes and maintaining accurate payroll reporting matters.
4. Michigan Is a Manufacturing and Automotive State — Product Liability Exposure Is Real
Michigan remains heavily tied to automotive, industrial, and manufacturing supply chains.
If your business:
- Produces components
- Supplies parts
- Designs products
- Installs manufactured goods
You may have product liability exposure extending far beyond the initial sale.
Key coverage considerations include:
- Completed operations liability
- Contractual liability clauses in vendor agreements
- Additional insured requirements
- Recall expense coverage (often excluded unless specifically added)
Many supplier contracts in Michigan’s automotive sector require specific limits and endorsements.
A general liability policy alone may not fully satisfy contractual risk transfer requirements.
5. Cyber Risk Is No Longer Limited to Tech Companies
Michigan small and mid-sized businesses are increasingly targeted by cyber events — especially:
- Ransomware attacks
- Business email compromise
- Funds transfer fraud
- Data breaches involving employee or customer data
Healthcare providers, manufacturers, professional service firms, and retailers are common targets.
Cyber coverage should address:
- Business interruption from system shutdowns
- Data recovery costs
- Legal and notification expenses
- Regulatory fines (where insurable)
Standard general liability policies do not cover most cyber events.
If your business handles customer data, employee records, or digital payments, cyber insurance deserves a serious review.
6. Liquor Liability Is Separate in Michigan
If your Michigan business:
- Serves alcohol
- Sells packaged alcohol
- Hosts events with alcohol
Liquor liability exposure may exist.
Michigan’s dram shop laws allow injured parties to pursue claims against alcohol-serving establishments under certain circumstances.
General liability policies typically exclude liquor liability for businesses that sell or serve alcohol as part of operations.
A separate liquor liability policy or endorsement is often required.
7. Contract Requirements Often Drive Coverage — Not Just Risk
Many Michigan businesses underestimate how often contracts dictate insurance needs.
Common requirements include:
- Additional insured endorsements
- Waivers of subrogation
- Primary and non-contributory language
- Specific umbrella limits
- Professional liability coverage
Construction, real estate, healthcare, and automotive supply contracts frequently contain strict insurance provisions.
Failing to align your policy structure with contract language can delay projects or void agreements.
Insurance should be reviewed alongside contracts — not after they’re signed.
8. Seasonal Business Patterns Require Planning
Michigan businesses often operate seasonally:
- Landscaping
- Snow removal
- Tourism
- Marinas and boating services
- Construction
Coverage considerations include:
- Off-season payroll adjustments
- Equipment storage coverage
- Inland marine for mobile equipment
- Commercial auto exposure shifts
- Workers’ comp classification changes
Policies should reflect operational timing — not just annual revenue.
9. Ordinance & Law Coverage Matters in Older Michigan Communities
Many Michigan downtown areas — Plymouth, Northville, Ann Arbor, Detroit neighborhoods — contain older commercial buildings.
If a building is damaged, rebuilding to current code can significantly increase costs.
Ordinance and law coverage may help address:
- Demolition costs
- Code upgrades
- Increased cost of construction
Without it, a business owner may pay the difference out-of-pocket.
10. Umbrella Coverage Is Often Undervalued
Litigation trends nationwide — and in Michigan — continue to push liability awards higher.
Commercial umbrella policies:
- Extend general liability
- Extend auto liability
- Extend employer’s liability
Umbrella coverage can be one of the most cost-effective ways to increase overall protection.
Why Michigan Businesses Benefit From a Local Insurance Advisor
Insurance is regulated at the state level. Requirements, court decisions, and industry norms vary.
Working with an agency that understands:
- Michigan no-fault law
- Local building codes
- Regional industry patterns
- State workers’ compensation requirements
Provides clarity that generic, out-of-state policy structures may miss.
If you’d like to explore how these Michigan-specific factors apply to your business, you can learn more about our approach to commercial insurance here: Commercial Insurance for Michigan Businesses
