Motor Truck Cargo Insurance protects the freight you haul, but the amount you’re actually covered for depends on two key parts of your policy: your cargo limit and your cargo deductible. These two numbers determine how much the insurer pays after a loss — and how much financial risk you keep for yourself.
Understanding how limits and deductibles work helps you avoid underinsuring freight, overpaying for coverage, or getting stuck with a denied or reduced claim.
Your cargo limit is the maximum amount your insurance company will pay for a covered cargo loss. If the value of the freight exceeds your limit, you may be responsible for the difference.
Many brokers and shippers will not assign loads unless your cargo limit meets their requirements.
Your limit should match the value of the freight you haul — not just the minimum required by brokers.
If you regularly haul freight worth more than your limit, you are underinsured — and that can lead to major out-of-pocket losses.
Your cargo deductible is the amount you pay out of pocket before the insurance company pays the rest of a covered claim.
Higher deductibles lower your premium, but increase your financial responsibility during a loss.
Your limit caps the insurer’s maximum payout. Your deductible reduces the payout by the amount you must pay first.
You haul a load worth $85,000. Your policy has:
The load is damaged in a covered loss. The insurer pays:
If the load had been worth $140,000, you would only receive $100,000 — your limit — and be responsible for the remaining $40,000.
Many truckers carry a $100,000 limit even when hauling freight worth much more. If a loss occurs, the insurer only pays up to the limit — not the full value of the freight.
Some loads do not list the full value on the bill of lading. Always ask the shipper or broker if the freight is high-value.
A $5,000 deductible may save money on premium, but it can create cash flow problems during a claim.
Reefer breakdown claims are denied if the policy does not include a reefer endorsement — even if the limit is high enough.
Most cargo claim issues come down to documentation and compliance.
These steps help prevent disputes and ensure smooth claim handling.
Your cargo limit and deductible determine how much financial protection you have when something goes wrong. Choosing the right limit, understanding your deductible, and verifying freight value before every load helps you avoid costly surprises and keeps your business protected.