Physical Damage / Hull Coverage Per-Drone · Fleet Aggregate · In-Flight · In-Transit

Drone Swarm Hull Insurance

Hull insurance is the coverage that pays for damage to the drone fleet itself — the airframes, the LED arrays, the propulsion systems, the avionics. It is not liability coverage. Aviation liability protects against third-party claims; hull protects against the operator's own loss when a drone is destroyed in flight, dropped during transit, lost in a fly-away, or burned in storage. For a 500-drone fleet at $2,500 per unit, that is $1.25 million in airframe value alone — before the LEDs, the GCS, the RTK base, and the transport gear are added to the schedule.

FLEET TOTAL INSURED VALUE · WHAT HULL ACTUALLY COVERS 50 DRONES Wedding / corporate ~$125K TIV @ $2.5K per drone, airframes only 200 DRONES Mid-market festival ~$500K TIV @ $2.5K per drone, airframes only 500 DRONES Stadium / arena 500 UNITS ~$1.25M TIV @ $2.5K per drone, airframes only ADD GROUND ASSETS ▸ GCS rigs: $25K each ×2-4 ▸ RTK base stations: $5K ×4 ▸ Charging racks: $3K ×10-20 ▸ Transport cases: $1K ×40-60 ▸ Tablets, comms, generators +$150K – $400K Inland Marine
$1.5K–$5K Replacement Cost Per Show Drone
8–15% Typical Annual Hull Rate Of TIV
3 States In-Flight, In-Transit, In-Storage
Mass Loss Single Event, Hundreds Of Drones

What Hull Insurance Actually Pays For

Hull insurance is the property coverage that responds when a drone — or a portion of the fleet — is physically damaged or destroyed. The form is descended from manned aircraft hull insurance, written for a century on commercial aircraft, adapted in the past decade for unmanned systems. It pays the operator for repair or replacement of the airframe, not the third-party claim arising from the drone causing damage to someone else. Aviation liability handles the third-party side. Hull handles the operator's own loss.

For a drone light show fleet, the hull line is doing one of the hardest jobs in this insurance program. A traditional manned-aircraft hull policy covers one airplane that flies a few hundred hours a year. A drone show hull policy covers hundreds of small aircraft that fly together in a single ten-minute show, often above a stadium full of spectators, where a single failure point — an RTK base going offline, a software bug in the choreography, a sudden wind gust — can take down the entire fleet at once. Underwriters refer to this as the mass loss exposure, and it is the structural reason drone show hull premiums are higher than equivalent manned-aircraft hulls per dollar of insured value.

The Three Coverage States — In-Flight, In-Transit, In-Storage

A drone show fleet exists in three different physical states across the year. Hull policies price each one differently, and the coverage form has to be written to respond in all three. A policy that only covers in-flight loss leaves the fleet exposed during the 90% of the year it is not flying. A policy that only covers in-storage exposure does nothing for the show itself.

01 Highest Risk State

In-Flight Coverage

Damage occurring during powered flight — a drone striking another drone in formation, a battery failure mid-show, a fly-away ending in impact, the entire swarm descending under fail-safe after RTK signal loss. The single most likely state to produce a claim, and the only state where mass loss events occur. Premium rates highest here.

02 High Mobility

In-Transit Coverage

Damage during transport between shows — a rented box truck being rear-ended on a highway, a pallet of transport cases dropped at a loading dock, theft from a vehicle parked at a hotel overnight, fire damage to a trailer. Coverage scope must match the operator's actual road pattern, including cross-country tours and international shipping where applicable.

03 Storage State

In-Storage Coverage

Damage at the operator's home base or warehouse — fire, water damage, theft, vandalism, lithium-ion battery thermal runaway in a charging area. Often the largest aggregate exposure because the entire fleet is concentrated in one location for most of the year. Battery storage and charging protocols become an underwriting question here.

The coverage scope on a properly placed drone show hull policy includes all three states without gap. The carrier may rate them differently and the deductible may vary by state, but the policy itself is one continuous form. Operators carrying separate property policies for storage and aviation hull only for flight create coverage seams that fail at the worst moments — a drone damaged during loading at the venue, for example, may fall between the two forms unless one of them is written to bridge the gap.

The Failure Mode Tree — What Actually Causes A Mass Loss

Underwriters care about hull because hull claims are concentrated and severe. A spectator-injury claim is one person, one investigation, one indemnity payment. A mass loss is the whole fleet. The diagram below maps the most common cascade paths — single-point failures that take down dozens or hundreds of drones in a single event.

CASCADE FAILURE PATHS · HOW A SINGLE FAULT BECOMES A MASS LOSS SINGLE POINT FAILURE During active show flight RTK BASE FAILURE GPS correction signal lost SOFTWARE / FIRMWARE BUG Cue sheet or geofence error COMMS LINK LOSS GCS-to-fleet RF channel fails ENVIRONMENTAL EVENT Wind gust or precipitation SWARM ENTERS FAIL-SAFE Drones drop GPS lock simultaneously Fleet descends under RTH protocol Hull loss: 100–500+ units FORMATION COLLISION Drones converge wrong waypoint Multi-drone impact mid-air Hull loss: 10–50 units FLY-AWAY EVENT Drones exit show airspace Battery exhausted, off-site landing Hull loss: per drone, recovery rare WEATHER EXCURSION Wind beyond mfr. envelope Drones tumble or impact ground Hull loss: variable, 10–200 units UNDERWRITING MITIGATION REQUESTED Redundant RTK base stations · Two-pilot operation · Sub-fleet geofencing · Pre-show wind/weather aborts · Failure mode rehearsal Underwriters look at single points of failure first; the safety case is built around eliminating each one.

The mitigation row at the bottom of the diagram is the entire reason underwriters care about an operator's safety SOPs. A 500-drone fleet with a single RTK base station is a different risk than the same fleet with two redundant RTK stations cross-checking each other. Operators who can document the redundancy in their submission package — the bubble/soft/hard geofence layers, the two-pilot redundancy, the comms backup channel, the wind-abort thresholds — get rated more favorably and bind faster. Operators with single points of failure throughout get either declined or surcharged heavily.

Per-Drone Limit vs. Fleet Aggregate Limit — How They Actually Pay

A drone show hull policy can be structured in two fundamentally different ways. The per-drone limit caps the carrier's payment per individual airframe destroyed. The fleet aggregate limit caps the carrier's total payment across the policy period regardless of how many drones are lost. Both have trade-offs, and the structure that works depends on the operator's loss pattern.

HULL LIMIT STRUCTURE · TWO APPROACHES, DIFFERENT PAYOUTS STRUCTURE A · PER-DRONE LIMIT CONFIGURATION ▸ Each drone scheduled at agreed value ▸ $2,500 per-drone limit (illustrative) ▸ No fleet-wide aggregate cap ▸ Per-drone deductible applies SCENARIO: 250 DRONES LOST ▸ Loss: 250 × $2,500 = $625,000 ▸ Deductible: 250 × $250 = $62,500 ▸ Carrier pays: $562,500 Best for: predictable losses, smaller fleets, operators wanting full per-unit recovery STRUCTURE B · FLEET AGGREGATE LIMIT CONFIGURATION ▸ Total fleet TIV scheduled ▸ $500,000 fleet aggregate (illustrative) ▸ Caps total annual payout ▸ Per-occurrence sub-limit may apply SCENARIO: 250 DRONES LOST ▸ Loss: 250 × $2,500 = $625,000 ▸ Aggregate caps at $500,000 ▸ Carrier pays: $500,000 max Best for: cost-conscious operators, accept aggregate cap risk for premium savings

The honest answer for most show operators is some hybrid of the two. A per-drone limit on the airframes themselves, with a fleet aggregate that caps the carrier's exposure across the policy period, gives the operator full recovery on small claims and predictable carrier exposure on the catastrophic mass-loss scenario. The deductible structure usually mirrors this — a per-drone deductible up to a per-occurrence aggregate ceiling, so the operator's out-of-pocket on a 200-drone loss is capped, not 200 separate deductibles.

Drone Show Manufacturer Pricing — What Each Unit Is Worth

Hull premium is rated on total insured value of the fleet, which means accurate per-unit replacement cost matters. The dominant show drone manufacturers in the U.S. and European markets each have a distinct price point and a distinct underwriting profile. The table below reflects publicly known pricing patterns and configuration ranges as a planning baseline — actual quoted replacement cost should always come from the manufacturer's current invoice or the operator's depreciation schedule.

Platform / Builder Typical Use Profile Replacement Cost Range Underwriting Note
Verge Aero U.S. show specialist, mid-to-large fleets, built for choreographed swarm work $2,000 – $3,500 per unit Well-known to specialty aviation underwriters; component supply chain documented
EFM Drones Custom builds, indoor and outdoor configurations, often used by enterprise operators $2,500 – $4,500 per unit Custom configurations may require operator-supplied valuation documentation
Custom / Pixis-style builds Operator-built or short-run builds, specialty payloads, hybrid pyro capable $3,000 – $5,500 per unit Underwriter often requests bill of materials and per-unit cost breakdown
Damoda / SPRY+ class Smaller indoor and venue fleets, lower payload, simpler configurations $1,500 – $2,500 per unit Used by smaller operators and indoor specialists; lower per-unit risk
High Great / Damoda imports Lower-cost imported show drones, common in entry-level fleets $800 – $2,000 per unit Carriers may scrutinize component sourcing and Remote ID compliance
Fleet Total — 500-drone show op Mid-market touring operator, mixed manufacturer fleet $1.0M – $2.0M typical airframe TIV Add 15–25% for batteries, 8–15% for spares, plus separate inland marine for ground gear

Pricing on this table is an industry-baseline planning reference, not a quote source. Carriers will ask for the operator's actual purchase invoices, depreciation schedule, and replacement-cost documentation as part of the submission. Operators flying a mixed fleet — say, 300 Verge Aero airframes and 200 custom-built drones — schedule each model separately at its own per-unit value rather than averaging across the fleet.

Schedule Your Hull TIV With Confidence

Bring your fleet roster, manufacturer invoices, and depreciation schedule. KIG's specialty aviation desk will help you build the hull schedule the way underwriters want to see it — model by model, agreed value where it matters, ACV where it makes sense, with the per-drone and aggregate structure that fits your loss pattern.

Agreed Value vs. Actual Cash Value — The Valuation Choice

Every hull policy uses one of two valuation methods. Agreed value pays the dollar amount written on the schedule, no questions asked, regardless of depreciation. Actual cash value pays replacement cost minus depreciation at the time of loss. The two produce dramatically different claim outcomes on the same fleet, especially for older drones that have been in service for several show seasons.

VALUATION CURVE · AGREED VALUE vs. ACTUAL CASH VALUE OVER 5 YEARS $2,500 $2,000 $1,500 $1,000 $500 $0 YEAR 0 YEAR 1 YEAR 2 YEAR 3 YEAR 4 YEAR 5 AGREED VALUE $2,500 per drone ACV ~$650 at year 5 $2,100 $1,650 $1,150 $800

For drone show fleets, agreed value almost always makes sense at policy inception. The drones are new at purchase, the operator wants full replacement at claim, and the premium difference between agreed value and ACV is typically modest (5–15%). For older fleets in their fourth or fifth show season, ACV becomes more reasonable — the fleet is already amortized on the operator's books, and the carrier and operator both benefit from a valuation method that reflects current market value rather than original invoice. The choice is best made at each annual renewal based on the fleet's age and the operator's replacement strategy.

The Hull Claim Scenarios Underwriters See Most Often

Hull underwriters classify claims by mechanism of loss. The list below covers the patterns that drive rate-making in this niche. Each is a real loss type that an aviation hull policy is designed to respond to.

In-Flight

Mass Loss From RTK Failure

The single most severe scenario. RTK base loses signal mid-show. Drones holding precise position via the corrected GPS feed all lose the correction simultaneously. Without redundancy, the swarm enters fail-safe and descends. Hundreds of units in a single event.

Hull Per-Drone × Aggregate Cap
In-Flight

Mid-Air Formation Collision

A choreography error or geofence breach causes drones to converge on the same waypoint. Multi-drone collision in formation. Smaller-scale than RTK cascade but still generates losses across 10–50 units in a single moment, often with debris falling into the spectator area.

Hull Per-Drone, Coord. With Aviation Liability
In-Flight

Single-Drone Battery Fire

A lithium-ion cell fails in flight. The drone descends burning. The drone itself is a hull loss; whatever it strikes on the ground is a third-party liability event. Battery fires in storage are property events, not aviation hull events — the policy has to be written to address both.

Hull Per-Drone + Aviation Liability
In-Flight

Fly-Away Event

A drone exits the show airspace under software error or comms loss, flies until battery exhaustion, and lands somewhere off-site. The drone is presumed lost. Recovery is rare. Hull responds for the airframe; if the drone causes off-site property damage, aviation liability responds in parallel.

Hull Per-Drone (Constructive Total Loss)
In-Transit

Truck Accident Between Shows

A rented box truck carrying the fleet between two cities is involved in a highway accident. Transport cases shift, drones inside are damaged. In-transit hull responds for the airframes; the truck damage is auto liability; injury to crew is workers comp. Three policies, one event.

Hull In-Transit + HNOA + WC
In-Transit

Theft From Hotel Parking Lot

A touring operator parks a rental box truck containing 300 drones at a hotel between shows. The truck is broken into overnight. Inland marine and in-transit hull respond depending on which form was written for off-premises overnight transit. Coverage scope and theft exclusions must align with road pattern.

Hull In-Transit + Inland Marine
In-Storage

Warehouse Battery Thermal Runaway

A battery in the charging area enters thermal runaway. Adjacent batteries propagate the fire. Half the fleet's stored batteries are damaged and the warehouse sustains structural damage. Property and storage hull respond; the operator's own building or tenant policy may also be involved.

Hull In-Storage + Property
In-Storage

Water Damage From Sprinkler Activation

A fire alarm in the storage warehouse activates the sprinkler system. Water saturates the racked drones. The water damage to the airframes is a covered hull loss; the cause-of-loss documentation determines whether subrogation against the building owner is pursued.

Hull In-Storage

Hull Deductible Structures — How Out-Of-Pocket Actually Works

Drone show hull deductibles look different from manned aircraft hull deductibles because the loss profile is different. A single 250-drone cascade event with a $250 per-drone deductible would generate $62,500 of operator out-of-pocket on a single claim — which is why most hull placements include a per-occurrence deductible cap above which no further per-drone deductible applies.

Per-Drone Deductible
$100 – $500

Applied to each individual drone destroyed. Standard structure. Higher per-drone deductibles produce lower premium but increase exposure on small repeated losses.

Per-Occurrence Cap
$5,000 – $25,000

Total deductible the operator pays on any single event regardless of drone count. Critical for mass loss scenarios — caps the operator's out-of-pocket on a 200-drone cascade.

In-Transit Deductible
$2,500 – $10,000

Often higher than in-flight per-drone deductibles to reflect the elevated theft risk on the road. May be set as a flat dollar amount per loss event rather than per drone.

In-Storage Deductible
$1,000 – $5,000

Lower than in-transit because losses tend to be more controlled (fire, water, theft from a known location). Coordinates with property policy deductibles to avoid double-payment.

Annual Aggregate Deductible
$10,000 – $50,000

Some operators negotiate an annual aggregate deductible cap — once total deductibles paid in the policy year reach this level, no further deductibles apply. Less common but valuable for high-frequency operators.

War / Hull Excluded Perils
No Coverage

War, terrorism (in some forms), nuclear, intentional acts, and operations outside the policy's geographic territory remain excluded. Some carriers offer war risk hull as a buyback endorsement.

The deductible structure is a tradeoff: lower deductibles mean higher premiums and less out-of-pocket on small losses; higher deductibles mean lower premiums and more out-of-pocket exposure. The right balance depends on the operator's loss frequency. An operator running 50 shows per year with three or four small losses has a different deductible appetite than an operator running ten shows per year with rare losses. The structure is negotiated at placement, not after.

Drone Swarm Hull Insurance — Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between hull insurance and aviation liability?
Hull insurance covers physical damage to the operator's own drone fleet. Aviation liability covers third-party bodily injury and property damage caused by the drones. They are separate coverage forms, often written by the same carrier in a combined policy but rated separately. A drone show operator typically carries both — hull protecting the fleet, aviation liability protecting against spectator and venue claims.
How is hull premium calculated on a drone fleet?
Hull premium is a percentage of total insured value, typically 8–15% annually for drone show fleets, depending on operator loss history, fleet age, deductible structure, and whether agreed value or ACV applies. A $1M TIV fleet with clean loss runs and a moderate deductible structure typically falls in the $80,000 to $130,000 annual hull range. Higher-frequency operators or fleets with prior mass-loss events fall above that range; smaller operators with simple use profiles fall below.
Does hull cover drones lost during a fly-away?
Yes, in most properly written drone show hull policies. A drone that exits the show airspace under software error or comms loss, runs out of battery, and lands somewhere off-site is treated as a constructive total loss — the carrier pays the agreed value or ACV regardless of whether the drone is physically recovered. Some policies require a reasonable search effort before paying; the policy language defines what counts as reasonable.
Does hull cover battery fires in storage?
Storage hull responds to battery fires in storage if the policy was written with in-storage coverage included. Many drone hull policies were originally written for in-flight only; adding storage coverage is now standard practice but historically required a separate property policy or an inland marine endorsement. Operators should specifically confirm storage scope at placement, especially around lithium-ion thermal runaway scenarios.
What's the difference between agreed value and ACV?
Agreed value pays the dollar amount written on the policy schedule when a drone is destroyed, regardless of depreciation. Actual cash value pays replacement cost minus depreciation at the time of loss. For new fleets, agreed value usually makes sense — the operator wants full replacement and the premium difference is modest. For older fleets in their fourth or fifth season, ACV may be more appropriate because the fleet is already amortized and the carrier and operator both benefit from current-market valuation.
Does hull include the LED payload, or just the airframe?
Most drone show hull policies include the LED payload as part of the per-drone agreed value, since the payload is integral to the show drone's purpose. Custom mounted equipment — pyrotechnic devices, specialty cameras, sensor payloads — may need to be specifically scheduled and rated separately. The hull schedule should reflect the as-flown configuration, not just the bare airframe.
Are spare drones covered under the same policy?
Yes, and most operators schedule them. A typical 500-drone show operator carries 50–100 spares for swap-in during teardown, transit, and rapid re-deployment. Spares are scheduled at the same per-unit value as active fleet drones, and the in-storage and in-transit coverage extends to them. Operators who run hot spares (drones held flight-ready as immediate substitutes during shows) may have specific in-flight coverage extended to them under certain forms.
What happens if my fleet grows mid-policy?
Hull policies typically allow mid-term additions to the fleet schedule with a pro-rated premium adjustment. Most carriers want notification within 30 days of acquisition; some have automatic newly-acquired coverage for a short window (often 30 to 60 days) up to a sub-limit, after which the addition has to be formally endorsed. Operators expanding rapidly should confirm the newly-acquired clause at policy inception so the gap is closed before it matters.
Can I get hull insurance with a prior mass loss claim?
Yes, but the placement is harder and the premium is higher. Specialty markets that write drone show hull will quote post-claim renewals when the operator can demonstrate concrete loss control improvements — additional RTK base redundancy, two-pilot operations, sub-fleet geofencing, formal SOPs, simulator training records. The decline from a prior carrier often outlines exactly what the next submission needs to address. The Hard-To-Place and After-A-Claim pages in this cluster cover the post-loss placement strategy in detail.
Does hull cover damage caused by software errors or third-party platforms?
Hull responds to the physical damage regardless of the cause, in most forms. The interesting question is subrogation — if a software bug in the choreography platform caused the loss, the hull carrier may pursue recovery against the software vendor under product liability theories. The operator gets paid; the carrier and the vendor's insurer fight over who ultimately bears the loss. Operators should confirm their hull policy's subrogation language and ensure their software vendor agreements do not waive the carrier's subrogation rights without consent.

Quote A Hull Schedule

Hull placement is detail work — every drone scheduled, every value documented, every state of operation accounted for. KIG places drone show hull through specialty aviation markets with the form depth to handle per-drone, aggregate, agreed value, and ACV structures. Send your fleet roster and we will start the schedule.

Kelly Insurance Group  ·  Aviation Hull, Fleet Schedule & Mass Loss Coverage Programs  ·  (412) 212-2800