What is Admitted vs. Non-Admitted Insurance Carriers?
Admitted carriers are state-licensed insurers that must follow state regulations and contribute to state guarantee funds. Non-admitted carriers have more flexibility but don’t have state guarantee fund protection.
What you need to know
Most restaurants use admitted carriers for standard coverage. Non-admitted carriers (also called “surplus lines”) step in when your restaurant is considered higher risk—like if you have multiple claims, serve alcohol late-night, or operate in a challenging location.
Key differences between carrier types:
Admitted Carriers:
- State-licensed and regulated – Must comply with all state insurance laws
- Guarantee fund protection – If the carrier fails, state funds may cover claims
- Rate approval required – Premium rates must be approved by state regulators
- Standard market – For restaurants with typical risk profiles
- Policy forms regulated – Coverage terms must meet state standards
Non-Admitted Carriers:
- Not state-licensed – Operate without state regulatory approval
- No guarantee fund backing – If carrier fails, you have no state protection
- Flexible pricing – Can charge rates without state approval
- Surplus lines market – For high-risk or unusual exposures
- Custom policy forms – Can offer specialized coverage not available from admitted carriers
When non-admitted carriers are used:
- Claims history issues – Multiple claims in recent years
- High-risk operations – Late-night bars, nightclubs, or venues with frequent incidents
- Challenging locations – High-crime areas or properties with known problems
- Unique exposures – Unusual business models that don’t fit standard policies
- Coverage gaps – Need for specialized coverage admitted carriers won’t provide
- Declined by admitted market – Standard carriers have refused coverage
The regulatory distinction: Admitted carriers must file their rates and policy forms with state insurance departments for approval. Non-admitted carriers bypass this process, giving them flexibility to cover risks the standard market rejects, but also operating with less regulatory oversight.
Financial strength matters more: With non-admitted carriers, verifying the carrier’s financial rating (A.M. Best rating of A- or higher) becomes critical since you don’t have state guarantee fund protection.
Why it matters for restaurant owners
If standard insurers won’t cover you or charge extremely high rates, non-admitted carriers provide an alternative. While they don’t have state guarantee fund backing, they allow high-risk restaurants to get coverage when admitted carriers decline.
Common scenarios requiring non-admitted coverage:
- Liquor liability challenges – Late-night alcohol service, history of overservice incidents
- Multiple general liability claims – Slip-and-falls, food poisoning, or assault claims in past 3-5 years
- Workers comp issues – High injury rates, serious incidents, or prior policy cancellations
- Property concerns – Fire damage history, poor property maintenance, high-crime location
- New ownership red flags – Buying a restaurant with a troubled claims history
The cost consideration: Non-admitted coverage typically costs 20-50% more than admitted market rates for comparable coverage. However, this is often your only option when the standard market won’t write your risk.
The trade-off: The trade-off is potentially higher costs and less regulatory oversight, but it beats having no insurance at all. Many restaurants operate successfully with non-admitted carriers and eventually transition back to the admitted market after improving their risk profile.
Improving your insurability:
- Reduce claims frequency – Implement strong safety programs and risk management
- Document improvements – Show insurers what you’ve changed to reduce risk
- Maintain continuous coverage – Gaps in coverage make you less attractive to admitted carriers
- Work with a specialist broker – They know which carriers will consider your risk
- Be patient – It may take 2-3 claim-free years to return to the standard market
Essential practices:
- Verify carrier financial strength – Check A.M. Best ratings before purchasing
- Understand coverage differences – Non-admitted policies may have different terms
- Review surplus lines taxes – Non-admitted coverage includes additional state taxes (typically 3-6%)
- Read policy carefully – Without state-mandated forms, policy language can vary significantly
- Ask about transition plans – Work with your broker on a path back to admitted coverage
- Don’t hide information – Dishonesty about claims history will void your coverage
Most restaurant owners will only use admitted carriers throughout their business life. But if you find yourself in the non-admitted market, it’s not a permanent designation—with strong risk management and time, you can return to standard coverage at better rates.
Insurance Carrier Assessment
Find out if you're likely to need admitted or non-admitted coverage