How to Read Your Trucking Insurance Declaration Page
Your dec page is the most important document in your truck. Here\u0027s what every section means and exactly what to check.
Why Your Dec Page Matters More Than You Think
Your declaration page (dec page) is the summary of your entire insurance policy. Brokers ask for it. DOT auditors request it. Shippers require it. If there\u0027s a mistake on your dec page, you might not find out until a claim is denied or you\u0027re turned away from a load.
What Exactly Is a Declaration Page?
A declaration page is usually 2-4 pages at the front of your insurance policy. It\u0027s the quick-reference summary that shows who\u0027s covered, what\u0027s covered, how much coverage you have, and what you\u0027re paying. Think of it as the table of contents for your entire policy.
Your dec page is for YOU — it shows your full policy details. A COI is for OTHERS — it proves you have coverage. Brokers and shippers ask for COIs. Your dec page stays in your files. They contain similar information but serve different purposes.
You\u0027ll receive a new dec page every time your policy renews, you add or remove a vehicle, change your limits, or add a driver. Always compare the new one against the previous version.
Anatomy of Your Dec Page: Section by Section
Every commercial trucking dec page contains the same core sections, regardless of carrier. Here\u0027s what each one means and what to verify.
Named Insured & Contact Information
The legal name of the person or business entity that purchased the policy. This is critical — if the name doesn\u0027t match your FMCSA registration or MC authority, you can have problems.
Policy Number & Period
Your unique policy number and the exact dates your coverage is active. Commercial trucking policies are typically 12-month terms.
Coverage Types & Limits
This is the heart of your dec page. It lists every coverage you purchased, the limit for each, and your deductible.
| Coverage | What It Shows | FMCSA Minimum |
|---|---|---|
| Auto Liability | Combined single limit (CSL) per occurrence | $750,000 |
| Cargo | Per occurrence limit for freight | $5,000 - $250,000* |
| Physical Damage | Actual cash value or stated amount per vehicle | Not required by FMCSA |
| General Liability | Per occurrence and aggregate limits | Not required by FMCSA |
| Bobtail / NTL | Coverage limit when not under dispatch | Not required by FMCSA |
| Uninsured Motorist | Coverage if hit by uninsured driver | Varies by state |
*Cargo minimums vary by commodity and broker requirements. Most brokers require $100,000.
Vehicle Schedule
Every vehicle covered under the policy, listed by year, make, model, and VIN. This is where errors happen most often — and where errors are most dangerous.
If the VIN on your dec page doesn\u0027t match the truck involved in a claim, the carrier can deny the claim entirely. Check every digit. One transposed number can cost you everything.
Driver Schedule
Lists all drivers covered by the policy. Unlisted drivers may not be covered if they\u0027re involved in an accident. Some policies are more flexible than others — check yours.
Premium Breakdown
How much you\u0027re paying for each coverage, per vehicle, plus fees and taxes. This is where you can spot savings opportunities or unexpected charges.
Endorsements & Exclusions
Endorsements modify your base policy — they can add or remove coverage. Exclusions list what\u0027s NOT covered. This is where surprises hide.
Common Endorsements (Added Coverage)
- Additional insured endorsements
- Hired auto coverage
- Trailer interchange
- Pollution liability
- Refrigeration breakdown
Common Exclusions (No Coverage)
- Named driver exclusions
- Radius limitations
- Specific commodity exclusions
- Loading/unloading exclusions
- Owned property exclusion
The 7 Most Costly Dec Page Errors
These are the mistakes that cost truckers real money. Every one of them is preventable with a 5-minute review.
Wrong Legal Name
Your LLC name doesn\u0027t match your MC authority. FMCSA filings show one name, your policy shows another. Claims can be denied.
Transposed VIN Digits
One wrong digit in a 17-character VIN. You won\u0027t notice until you file a claim on a truck that technically isn\u0027t on your policy.
Missing Vehicles
You bought a new truck or trailer and forgot to add it. You\u0027re driving uninsured. One accident and you\u0027re personally liable.
Old Vehicles Still Listed
You sold a truck 6 months ago but it\u0027s still on your policy. You\u0027re paying premium on a truck you don\u0027t own.
Excluded Driver Still Driving
A driver was excluded from your policy (often due to MVR issues). They\u0027re still behind the wheel. Zero coverage if they crash.
Wrong Radius
Your policy says 500-mile radius but you\u0027re running coast-to-coast. Coverage may not apply outside your declared operating radius.
Insufficient Cargo Limits
Your cargo limit is $100K but you\u0027re hauling $300K in electronics. You\u0027re personally responsible for the $200K gap.
Dec Page vs. Other Insurance Documents
Truckers deal with several insurance documents. Here\u0027s how they\u0027re different and when you need each one.
| Document | Who It\u0027s For | What It Shows | When You Need It |
|---|---|---|---|
| Declaration Page | You (policyholder) | Full policy summary, all details | Policy review, renewals, claims |
| Certificate of Insurance (COI) | Brokers, shippers, lessors | Proof of coverage, certificate holder | Before every load, new contracts |
| Insurance ID Card | Law enforcement, weigh stations | Basic coverage confirmation | Roadside inspections, traffic stops |
| MCS-90 / BMC-91 | FMCSA / public | Proof of financial responsibility | Authority activation, FMCSA filings |
| Full Policy Document | You (policyholder) | Complete terms, conditions, exclusions | Claims disputes, coverage questions |
5 Things to Do With Your Dec Page Right Now
Photograph Every Page
Take clear photos and store them in your phone. When a broker or DOT officer asks for proof of coverage and you can\u0027t reach your agent, you\u0027ll have it instantly.
Verify Against Your MC/DOT
Pull up your FMCSA record on SAFER. Compare the legal name, USDOT number, and MC number against your dec page. They must match exactly.
Cross-Check Every VIN
Get your vehicle registrations. Compare each VIN digit-by-digit against the vehicle schedule on your dec page. Mark any discrepancies and call your agent immediately.
Read the Exclusions
Flip to the endorsements section. Read every exclusion out loud. If anything is excluded that you actually need covered, call your agent before you need it — not after.
Calendar Your Renewal
Set a reminder 60 days before your policy expires. This gives you time to shop rates, fix issues, and avoid last-minute renewals with no leverage.
Comparing Dec Pages at Renewal
Every renewal, you should compare your new dec page against the previous one. Here\u0027s what to look for.
Limits Changed?
Did any coverage limits go down without your approval? Carriers sometimes reduce limits at renewal to keep premiums lower. Make sure you still have what you need.
Deductibles Changed?
Higher deductibles reduce your premium but increase your out-of-pocket on a claim. Make sure you agreed to any deductible changes.
New Exclusions Added?
Carriers can add exclusions at renewal. A new radius restriction, commodity exclusion, or named driver exclusion could leave you uncovered for work you\u0027re already doing.
Premium Breakdown Different?
Look at per-vehicle premiums. If one truck\u0027s rate jumped, find out why. It might be a driver\u0027s MVR, a claim on that unit, or an age surcharge.
Carrier Changed?
Your agent may have moved you to a different insurance carrier. Check the carrier\u0027s AM Best rating and make sure they\u0027re FMCSA-authorized to provide MCS-90 filings.
All Vehicles Still Listed?
Confirm every vehicle you\u0027re currently operating appears on the new policy. Vehicles can get dropped during carrier transitions.
When to Call Your Agent About Your Dec Page
Call Immediately
- Wrong legal name or entity type
- Missing vehicle you\u0027re currently driving
- VIN error on any vehicle
- Coverage gap between old and new policy
- Excluded driver who is still driving for you
Call This Week
- Old vehicle still listed (paying unnecessary premium)
- Deductible higher than you agreed to
- Missing endorsement you were quoted
- Address or contact info wrong
- New exclusion you didn\u0027t approve
Discuss at Renewal
- Premium higher than expected
- Want to adjust coverage limits
- Adding new types of cargo
- Expanding operating radius
- Comparing against other quotes
Insurance Terms You\u0027ll See on Your Dec Page
Your dec page uses insurance terminology. Here\u0027s a plain-English translation of the most common terms.
Need Help Understanding Your Dec Page?
If something on your declaration page doesn\u0027t look right, or you want a second opinion on your coverage, call us. We\u0027ll review your dec page with you — no charge, no pressure.
Call 208-800-0640We explain insurance in plain English. That\u0027s what we do.
Frequently Asked Questions
How often should I review my dec page?
At minimum, review it at every renewal and whenever you receive an updated version (after adding/removing vehicles or drivers). Ideally, do a thorough review quarterly. Keep a copy in your truck and one at home or in the cloud.
Can my agent fix dec page errors?
Yes. Your agent can request corrections from the insurance carrier. Most errors can be fixed within 24-48 hours. You\u0027ll receive a revised dec page once the correction is processed. Always confirm the fix in writing.
What if my broker asks for my dec page instead of a COI?
Some brokers ask for dec pages, but you should be cautious. Your dec page contains premium information and other private details. It\u0027s better to provide a Certificate of Insurance, which shows proof of coverage without revealing what you\u0027re paying. If a broker insists on a dec page, redact the premium section.
Is an electronic dec page valid?
Yes. Electronic and PDF dec pages are legally valid in all 50 states. Most insurance carriers issue electronic copies as standard. A photo on your phone is acceptable at most weigh stations, though some DOT officers prefer the actual insurance ID card.