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Fashion Production Company Insurance

A fashion production company is a small studio business in dress rehearsal between Tuesday and Friday and a fully staffed film unit on Saturday. The same EIN that runs payroll for two full-time employees on Monday is the named insured underwriting a 35-person crew at Pier 59 on Sunday, with a producer signing the call sheet, a DP loading $40K in glass into a hard case, a wardrobe stylist pulling six figures of borrowed sample, and a SAG-AFTRA principal walking into a fitting at 9:00 AM under the 2025 Commercials Contract.

The brokerage places insurance built for that mode-switching reality. Coverage works across the full editorial-to-commercial spectrum: editorial shoots for magazines and digital publishers; brand campaigns for fashion houses; lookbook days for designers; e-commerce production for DTC operators; branded content and short-form video for paid social; SAG and non-SAG commercials; music-video sequences with fashion elements; and the increasingly common single-day single-location shoot that still needs a real production policy in force at 06:00 load-in.

Term Options Annual · DICE · Short-Term
Cert Turnaround Same-Day Standard
Limit Range $1M / $2M Up To Excess
SAG Signatory Welcome
CALL SHEET · DAY 01 SHEET 01 / 01
ProductionCAMPAIGN · S/S DROP
Crew Call06:00 LOCAL
Talent Call09:00 LOCAL
LocationSTUDIO + EXTERIOR
Crew Size35 (W-2 + 1099 MIX)
Permit StatusFILMING PERMIT REQ.
SAG / Non-UnionSAG SIGNATORY
Drone FootagePART 107 PILOT
Insurance BoundCERT ISSUED
AI EndorsementsCLIENT · LOCATION
SAG-AFTRA Commercials Contract
2025 MOA
Current Commercials Contract effective April 1, 2025; three-year agreement negotiated with the Joint Policy Committee
SAG-AFTRA · JPC · April 2025
Drone Operations
14 CFR 107
FAA Part 107 requires Remote Pilot Certificate for any commercial drone use under 55 lbs in US airspace; valid 24 months
14 CFR Part 107
Remote ID Compliance
Sept 2023
FAA Remote ID rule effective September 16, 2023 — drones requiring registration must broadcast identification in flight
14 CFR Part 89
Digital Replicas
1.5× Scale
2025 Commercials Contract requires minimum compensation of 1.5× applicable scale session fee, plus use and holding, for commercials featuring a performer's digital replica
2025 MOA · Digital Replica
Section 01 · The Operating Mode-Switch

What A Fashion Production Company Actually Is, On An Insurance Form

A fashion production company is an unusual underwriting object. The day-to-day operations look like a creative services consultancy — a small office, a few full-time producers and PMs, project management software, accounts payable for vendors. The shoot-day operations look like a film unit — payroll spike, equipment trucks, crew of 25 to 80, location moves, hazardous-environment exposures, talent agreements, union compliance, and a per-day burn that can exceed what the office spends in a month. Both modes coexist under one legal entity, and the insurance has to respect both.

The way the market handles this is to write a production policy that's elastic across the production calendar. The named insured is the production company; the policy covers the entity's everyday operations and the productions it executes. Some carriers do this on a single annual form with production endorsements; others split it between a base CGL/property policy and a separate DICE policy — Documentary, Industrial, Commercial, Educational — that covers the per-production exposures. Single-shoot or short-term production policies pick up the gap when an annual form isn't right.

A clean fashion production policy is one document the production company can hand to a client, a location, a SAG agent, an equipment rental house, and a talent agency — and have everyone read what they need on the same certificate.

This page is the operator's view of how the form gets built: the production phases where exposure shifts, the twelve production departments that each carry their own risk, the coverage ladder a brokerage builds for a fashion production account, the SAG / Part 107 / OSHA compliance layer, and the certificate logistics that determine whether load-in actually happens on schedule.

Section 02 · The Five Phases Of A Production

Where The Form Activates Across The Calendar

A production isn't a single moment; it's a five-phase timeline that runs from initial bid through final delivery. Different coverage forms activate at different phases, and a clean production company program is structured so the right form is in force when each phase begins.

// PHASE 01

Pre-Production

Casting, location scouting, crew booking, sample pulls, prop sourcing, pre-pro meetings. Exposure tilts toward sample bailment, location agreement liability, and IP / clearance risk on creative direction.

CGL · Inland Marine · Cyber
// PHASE 02

Build / Pre-Light

Set construction, paint, scenic, lighting pre-rig. Working-at-height exposure activates; crew payroll begins; equipment rental in-bound on care-custody-control.

Workers' Comp · Equipment CCC
// PHASE 03

Principal Photography

Shoot days. Full crew, full talent, full equipment, full liability. Every form is active simultaneously: CGL, equipment, samples, talent W&A, weather contingency, third-party property at the location.

All Forms Active
// PHASE 04

Wrap

Strike, equipment returns, location restoration, sample returns to bailors, talent agreements settled. Last-minute damage discoveries and missing-equipment claims peak in this 48-hour window.

Equipment · Inland Marine · CGL
// PHASE 05

Post / Delivery

Editorial, color, sound, VFX, deliverables to client. Errors & omissions becomes the dominant exposure; copyright clearance, music sync, and right-of-publicity verification all happen pre-delivery.

E&O · Cyber · Media Liability
Section 03 · The Twelve Production Departments

Each Department Carries Its Own Insurable Risk

A fashion shoot is structured into discrete departments, each with its own head, its own crew, its own equipment package, and its own liability profile. A production company's policy has to address each one specifically — the form rated at the entity level still has to respond when something happens at the camera department, the grip & electric department, the talent department, or anywhere else on the call sheet.

// DEPT 01 · PRODUCTION

Production Office

Producer, line producer, production manager, production coordinator, PAs. Owns the call sheet, the schedule, and the legal exposure for everything that happens on set.

CGLEPLICyber
// DEPT 02 · CAMERA

Camera Department

DP / cinematographer, camera op, 1st AC, 2nd AC, DIT, loader. Highest-value equipment package on set — bodies, glass, monitors, follow-focus, matte boxes.

Camera CCCDrop Damage
// DEPT 03 · LIGHTING / GRIP

Grip & Electric

Gaffer, best boy electric, key grip, best boy grip, electricians, grips. Working at height; high-amp distro; rigging; modifying ambient environment. Highest-injury department.

Workers' CompFalling Objects
// DEPT 04 · WARDROBE

Wardrobe / Styling

Wardrobe stylist, assistant stylists, tailor. Borrowed samples on bailment from brands; pull authorizations; return condition disputes; sample loss frequency dominates this department.

Inland MarineBailee
// DEPT 05 · HMU

Hair & Makeup

Key hair, key makeup, additional artists. Personal injury exposure from products (allergic reactions, burns from heated tools). Kit-and-equipment loss; talent property handling.

ProductsBodily Injury
// DEPT 06 · ART

Art / Set Design

Production designer, art director, set decorator, prop master, scenic carpenters. Set construction, scenic, props, paint. Working at height during build; tool injuries; structural collapse risk.

StructuralWorkers' Comp
// DEPT 07 · TALENT

Talent / Models

Principal performers, featured talent, fitness talent, models, kids. SAG-AFTRA compliance, minor work permits, agency indemnity. Right-of-publicity and image-release management.

SAG ComplianceRight Of Publicity
// DEPT 08 · SOUND

Sound Department

Sound mixer, boom op, sound utility. Sync sound capture for branded content and commercials. Music licensing for any temp music used on set.

Equipment CCCMusic Sync
// DEPT 09 · LOCATION

Locations

Location manager, location assistants, location PAs. Permits, location agreements, additional insureds, property damage at filming location, neighbor noise complaints, vehicle-on-property risk.

Premises3rd-Party Property
// DEPT 10 · TRANSPO

Transportation

Drivers, picture cars, production vehicles. Hired and non-owned auto; cargo coverage on equipment in transit; commercial driver licensing for larger trucks.

HNOACargo
// DEPT 11 · AERIAL

Aerial / Drone

FAA Part 107 remote pilot, visual observer. Aircraft hull and liability coverage for the UAS; airspace authorizations; operations over people and at night require specific 2021-rule compliance.

AviationPart 107
// DEPT 12 · POST

Post Production

Editor, assistant editor, colorist, sound designer, VFX supervisor. E&O exposure, music sync, clearance verification, AI / generative tool use risk under 2025 SAG-AFTRA digital replica rules.

E&OMedia Liability
Section 04 · The Coverage Ladder

The Five Tiers Of A Fashion Production Program

Active fashion production set with professional cinema cameras, lighting fixtures, wardrobe styling area, and crew working on a campaign shoot
Working set during principal photography — the moment when every department's exposure is simultaneously active and the policy form needs to be already bound, already on-cert, already endorsed for every party present

The ladder to the right represents the layered structure a brokerage builds for a fashion production company account. Tier 1 is non-negotiable — it's the load-bearing form. Each ascending tier addresses additional exposures that the production calendar dictates.

Not every production company needs every tier. A small production company doing exclusively e-commerce work in a controlled studio environment might stop at Tier 3. A company executing nationwide commercial campaigns with SAG talent and drone footage needs all five.

📋 Form Terminology

DICE policy stands for Documentary, Industrial, Commercial, Educational — an industry term for the production-specific package form that covers per-production exposures (third-party property, equipment, faulty stock, civil authority, weather, props/sets/wardrobe, cast). Some carriers package it as "Producer's Package Policy" or "Short-Term Production Policy"; the coverage scope is the same.

Production Coverage Ladder

// 5 TIERS · MODULAR
Tier 01
Core

Commercial General Liability

Third-party bodily injury and property damage at any production location. Personal & advertising injury. Damage to rented premises. The baseline that issues additional insured endorsements to clients, locations, and vendors.

ISO CG 00 01$1M / $2M StandardCG 20 26 AIs
Tier 02
Workers' Comp

Workers' Compensation & Employer's Liability

Statutory workers' comp for W-2 crew. Employer's liability for state-law tort claims. Critical for productions with W-2 PAs, in-house producers, and any direct-hire crew. State-rated; multi-state crews require schedule review.

Statutory CoverageEL $1M / $1M / $1M
Tier 03
Production

DICE / Producer's Package Policy

The production-specific package: third-party property damage at the production location, owned and rented equipment, faulty stock / camera / processing, civil authority, props/sets/wardrobe, extra expense, and cast insurance.

Equipment3rd-Party PropertyProps/Sets/WardrobeCastFaulty Stock
Tier 04
Liability+

Excess / Umbrella · Hired & Non-Owned Auto

Umbrella sits over CGL, EL, and HNOA. Hired and non-owned auto for production vehicles, picture cars, equipment trucks. Excess limits typically required by major clients and venues — $5M to $10M is a common contractual minimum.

Umbrella $5M+HNOACargo
Tier 05
Specialty

E&O · Cyber · Aviation · Foreign

Errors and omissions for finished media; cyber for the studio's data environment and any live-stream; aviation (typically Lloyd's) for drone operations under Part 107; foreign liability for international locations; weather contingency for outdoor shoots.

E&OCyberAviation (Drone)Foreign GLWeather
Section 05 · Six Exposures That Define The Class

Where Fashion Production Insurance Gets Specific

A generic commercial production policy doesn't fit a fashion production company. The exposures below are the ones that make this class its own thing — they distinguish a fashion-production placement from a TV-commercial-production placement, and they're the ones that turn a clean account into a hard-to-place one when they're handled wrong.

// EXPOSURE 01

Borrowed Sample Bailment

A fashion shoot often involves five- to seven-figure aggregate sample value on set, borrowed from brands, showrooms, PR houses, or sample-rental services. None of those samples are the production's property. All of them are the production's exposure.

↳ Coverage Response

Inland marine sample bailment with sub-limit per pull, valuation method (replacement vs. wholesale vs. retail) agreed in advance, and pull-out / pull-in documentation requirements. The pull form is the underwriting artifact.

// EXPOSURE 02

Mixed W-2 / 1099 / Loan-Out Crew

A typical fashion production day has a mixed crew: salaried producers (W-2), freelance crew on 1099, talent through loan-out corporations, PAs sometimes day-rated as W-2, agency contractors. Each classification has different workers' compensation, EPLI, and tax-withholding implications.

↳ Coverage Response

Workers' comp with multi-state schedule, payroll service coordination for properly classified crew, EPLI with misclassification endorsement, and a documented internal classification methodology aligned to the IRS economic-reality test and state-specific ABC tests.

// EXPOSURE 03

Talent & Right Of Publicity

Every face on a fashion campaign is a right-of-publicity property. Models, principals, featured talent, even the visible PA. Use beyond what the agreement allows — territory expansion, channel expansion, derivative cuts — is one of the most common E&O claims in the class.

↳ Coverage Response

Talent and model agreements with specific use windows, territories, and channels. E&O coverage for finished media. Documented review of usage prior to delivery. SAG-AFTRA Commercials Contract compliance for signatory productions.

// EXPOSURE 04

Drone / Aerial Footage

Aerial cinematography in fashion has become standard — campaign films, location B-roll, drone-driven hero shots. Any commercial use of a drone under 55 lbs in US airspace requires an FAA Remote Pilot Certificate under 14 CFR Part 107.

↳ Coverage Response

Aviation liability and hull coverage for the UAS, typically placed through Lloyd's or specialty aviation markets. Pilot must hold an active Part 107 certificate. Operations over people, night operations, or operations beyond visual line of sight require specific waivers or rule compliance.

// EXPOSURE 05

Client / Location Additional Insured Cascade

A single shoot day routinely requires additional insured endorsements for: the client brand, the client's parent company, the agency, the location, the location owner, the property manager, and sometimes a real-estate trust. Each AI has its own contract requirements for limits, P&NC language, and waiver of subrogation.

↳ Coverage Response

Annual production policy with blanket additional insured endorsements where contract requires. Same-day certificate issuance protocol with the carrier. Primary and non-contributory language, waiver of subrogation, and 30-day notice of cancellation routinely available on production forms.

// EXPOSURE 06

AI / Generative Tool Use In Post

Use of generative AI tools in post-production — face replacement, retouching, scene generation, voice synthesis — engages the 2025 SAG-AFTRA Commercials Contract's digital replica framework for any union performer. Outside of SAG, the underlying training-data IP, right-of-publicity, and downstream client warranty exposure all need to be assessed before delivery.

↳ Coverage Response

E&O coverage for finished media. Documented internal AI-use policy. Written informed consent and compensation from any performer whose likeness is replicated. The 2025 Commercials Contract requires minimum compensation of 1.5× applicable scale session fee, plus use and holding fees, for digital replica use of union performers.

Section 06 · The Compliance Layer

Four Federal Regimes That Sit Above The Coverage Form

Fashion production company creative meeting room with garment samples, mood boards, concept references, and pre-production planning for a campaign
Pre-production room — where samples, concept boards, talent options, and the call sheet are still in design phase but the legal and insurance commitments for everything that follows are already accruing

Insurance sits underneath compliance. A defensible fashion production company keeps a clean file on each of the federal regimes below, and the policy submission is rated as much on the compliance posture as on the production volume.

The four regimes below are the ones most relevant to a fashion production specifically. Other industries layer their own — child performer rules, environmental disclosures, healthcare-product regulation for beauty shoots — that the brokerage addresses separately as the production mix requires.

S

SAG-AFTRA Commercials Contract

  • 2025 MOAThree-year agreement effective April 1, 2025, negotiated with the Joint Policy Committee.
  • Digital ReplicasMinimum 1.5× scale session fee plus use and holding for digital replica performances.
  • Informed ConsentProducers must obtain performer consent for any digital replica use; replicas must be destroyed after the maximum period of use absent consent to retain.
  • Streaming Use Fee52-week streaming use cycle pays on-camera principals $10,000 under the 2025 contract.
F

FAA Part 107 (Drone)

  • Certificate RequiredRemote Pilot Certificate required for any commercial drone operation; 14 CFR Part 107.
  • RecertificationValid 24 months; recurrent online training required to maintain.
  • Aircraft WeightPart 107 covers UAS under 55 lbs (including payload) at takeoff.
  • Operations Over PeopleEffective April 21, 2021; flight over people and at night permitted under specific rule conditions.
  • Remote IDRequired for all drones requiring registration, effective September 16, 2023.
O

OSHA General Industry

  • 29 CFR 1910OSHA General Industry standards apply on most production sets; subpart D covers walking-working surfaces and fall protection.
  • Fall Protection29 CFR 1910 Subpart D — applies to grip/electric working at height during rig.
  • Electrical Safety29 CFR 1910 Subpart S — applies to lighting distro, generator use, and any temporary electrical work on set.
  • Hazard Communication29 CFR 1910.1200 — applies to fog/haze fluids, scenic paint, and any chemicals on set.
C

Child Performer / Minor Labor

  • NY DOL PermitNew York Department of Labor child performer permit required for minors working in entertainment / modeling.
  • California CooganCalifornia Family Code §6750 et seq. requires Coogan trust accounts for minor earnings; 15% gross minimum withholding.
  • Hour LimitsState-specific limits on hours worked, education time, rest breaks; on-set studio teacher / welfare worker required above thresholds.
  • Federal FLSAFederal Fair Labor Standards Act minimum-age and hour rules apply baseline; state rules add layer on top.
⚠ Underwriting Note

For a SAG-signatory production company, the carrier underwriting the production package will request the SAG agreement number, the names of the SAG performers on the call sheet, and the production company's signatory status with SAG-AFTRA. For a non-SAG production, the carrier will request the agency or model agreements directly. Misclassification of a SAG performer as non-union creates not only union enforcement risk but also coverage risk on the E&O form.

Section 07 · Connected Coverage In The KIG Library

Pages That Connect To A Production Company Account

A fashion production company account sits at the intersection of three coverage clusters: production / entertainment, fashion, and the broader specialty book. The pages below describe the related placements that frequently sit alongside a production company program.

Production & Entertainment Coverage
Fashion Industry Cluster
Supporting Coverage Lines
Section 08 · FAQ

Fashion Production Company Insurance FAQ

Is annual coverage better than per-shoot coverage for a fashion production company?
For any production company executing more than a handful of shoots per year, annual coverage is materially better in three ways: aggregate premium is typically lower than the sum of per-shoot premiums; certificate turnaround is faster (the broker has standing authority to issue without a new application each time); and limits are continuous rather than reset per production. Per-shoot DICE or short-term production policies make sense for one-off productions, for accounts in their first year before a track record exists, or for hard-to-place productions outside the annual carrier's appetite. The brokerage evaluates both structures during the initial submission and recommends what fits the actual production calendar.
What does "DICE" mean and is that what we need?
DICE is an industry term for Documentary, Industrial, Commercial, Educational — the production-specific package form that covers per-production exposures: third-party property at the location, owned and rented equipment, faulty stock / camera / processing, civil authority delays, props/sets/wardrobe, extra expense, and cast insurance. Most commercial productions and fashion production companies need a DICE-style form (sometimes branded as "Producer's Package Policy" or "Short-Term Production Policy" by individual carriers) in addition to the entity-level CGL, workers' comp, and umbrella. The two together form the working production program.
How fast can you issue a certificate for a same-day shoot?
For accounts placed with the carriers the brokerage works with regularly on production accounts, same-day certificate issuance is standard. Once the policy is bound and the production company's annual or term form is in force, certificate-only requests with standard language can be issued within a few hours. Unusual certificate requirements — non-standard primary and non-contributory language, unusual additional insured cascades, location-specific limit increases — sometimes need carrier review and take longer. The faster the production company gets the certificate requirements to the broker, the faster the certificate comes back.
Do we need workers' compensation if our crew is all freelance?
It depends on classification. Workers' compensation is required by state statute for W-2 employees. A crew member who is genuinely a 1099 independent contractor is generally not the production company's workers' comp responsibility. But the IRS economic-reality test and state-specific ABC tests (especially California's AB 5, New York's recent guidance, Massachusetts) are aggressive in classifying production crew as employees regardless of how the production company labels them. The safest posture is: (1) clean classification methodology with documented analysis per role, (2) a payroll service that issues W-2s where appropriate and 1099s where genuinely appropriate, (3) workers' comp coverage scaled to the W-2 portion, and (4) EPLI with a misclassification endorsement.
What about SAG-AFTRA — are we a signatory automatically?
No. A production company becomes a signatory by signing the relevant SAG-AFTRA agreement (the 2025 Commercials Contract for commercials, the Theatrical/TV Contract for episodic and feature work, or one of the low-budget agreements). Signatory status carries minimum-scale obligations, health and pension contributions, and specific compliance requirements. Many fashion production companies operate as non-union for editorial and lookbook work and become signatory only for commercials with SAG talent. The carrier will ask which contracts you're signatory to during underwriting; misrepresenting signatory status creates both union enforcement and coverage exposure.
How do we cover borrowed samples on a shoot?
Inland marine sample bailment, scheduled to the production policy. Carriers typically request: average aggregate value at risk per shoot day, peak value on the largest shoot, per-piece maximum, valuation method agreed in advance (replacement vs. wholesale vs. retail), and the production company's pull-form / pull-in procedure. The form responds to damage, theft, mysterious disappearance, and loss while in transit between the bailor and the location. Samples returned to the wrong showroom, samples damaged by hot lights, samples stained by makeup or food at a shoot — all of those have specific coverage logic that the underwriter wants to see addressed in the operating procedure before quoting limits.
Does our policy cover drone footage we shoot ourselves?
Aviation coverage for drones is a specialty placement that sits separately from the production package. Most fashion production companies that shoot their own drone footage need: (1) a Remote Pilot Certificate under 14 CFR Part 107 for the operator, (2) FAA registration for any UAS over 0.55 lbs, (3) Remote ID compliance for any drone requiring registration (effective September 16, 2023), and (4) aircraft hull and liability coverage on the UAS itself, typically placed through Lloyd's or specialty aviation markets. If the production company subcontracts drone work to a licensed operator, the operator's insurance plus a vendor agreement with proper additional insured language is the cleaner structure.
What is "errors and omissions" coverage and when do we need it?
Errors and omissions (E&O) is media liability coverage for finished content. It responds to defamation, invasion of privacy, right-of-publicity claims, copyright infringement, trademark infringement, and idea-misappropriation claims arising from the production company's deliverables. For brand campaigns, the brand client typically requires E&O coverage with the brand named as additional insured. For editorial work, the publisher's E&O may extend; for branded content delivered to the brand, the production company's own E&O is the load-bearing form. The 2025 SAG-AFTRA Commercials Contract's digital replica framework adds an AI-use overlay that the E&O form's exclusions are starting to address explicitly.
What kind of additional insureds will clients and locations ask for?
A typical fashion shoot cert request includes the brand client and its parent corporation, the agency (if one is involved), the location, the location owner, the property manager, and sometimes a real estate trust or lender. Each AI is added by endorsement to the production company's policy. Standard ISO endorsements are CG 20 26 (designated person or organization) and CG 20 11 (managers or lessors of premises). Primary and non-contributory language and waiver of subrogation are typically required by the underlying contract; the brokerage coordinates with the carrier to issue the certificate to match.
Does our existing camera-rental house insurance cover the equipment on our shoots?
Sometimes partially, rarely fully. When a production company rents equipment from a rental house, the rental house's own insurance covers the equipment as the rental house's property — but the production company is typically required by the rental agreement to carry its own equipment care-custody-control coverage at full replacement value. The CCC line on the production company's policy responds to damage, theft, and loss of rented equipment while in the production's custody. Rental house contracts that read "renter shall maintain insurance covering this equipment" usually mean the production company's CCC form has to be in force, with the rental house named as loss payee.
What is "faulty stock, camera, and processing" coverage?
A traditional production-policy coverage section that responds when footage is lost due to defective recording media, camera malfunction, or processing/handling errors at the lab or DIT cart. With digital workflows it has evolved to address corrupted media cards, file-corruption events at the DIT cart, drive failures on data wrangling devices, and similar digital-equivalent losses. The form pays the cost of reshoot — additional crew days, talent fees, location rental, equipment rental — needed to recreate the lost footage. Sub-limits and specific exclusions for negligence are common; underwriters scrutinize the production company's data-management procedures.
What if our production company has been declined or non-renewed?
That's the brokerage's primary book. Hard-to-place production companies — prior cast claim, prior third-party property loss at a location, complex SAG signatory history, drone-heavy operations, international production work, prior E&O claim — typically still place through specialty production carriers (Allianz Entertainment, Chubb Entertainment, Markel Specialty, Berkley Entertainment, Lloyd's syndicates), with the submission narrative built around the issue rather than concealing it.

Start The Production Company Submission

Use the intake portal to begin the submission, or schedule a discovery call to walk through the production calendar, the crew profile, and the certificate requirements before any paperwork moves. Production company placements typically bind within 5 to 10 business days; single-shoot policies within 24 to 72 hours.