Commercial Amusement Coverage · Kelly Insurance Group

Inflatable Rental Business Insurance

Built for commercial operators — bounce house rentals, obstacle courses, mechanical inflatables, water units, and giant slides. Fast COIs, proper limits, real participant liability.

Renting Inflatables Is A Commercial Exposure

Inflatable rental business insurance is built for operators who own the units, deliver them, set them up, and take them back down. That is a different conversation from a homeowner renting a bounce house for a backyard birthday — the exposure is ongoing, multi-event, and shaped by every unit you put on the road.

The category stretches well beyond basic bounce houses. Static units, mechanical and moving-part inflatables, water slides, obstacle courses, giant slides over 20 feet, and interactive games all land here — and every one of them changes how an underwriter looks at the account.

Kelly Insurance Group writes inflatable rental operators across the United States. Whether you have two bounce houses and a trailer or a full fleet running seven days a week, we know what it takes to place the account cleanly.

Renting for a single backyard party? That's a different page — visit our Inflatables & Bounce House Insurance page for short-term and consumer-facing coverage. This page is built for operators running a rental business.

Unit Types We Write

Every category below changes the conversation with the underwriter. Disclose everything up front — unit counts, heights, water exposure, and mechanical components all matter.

Standard

Static Inflatables

Traditional bounce houses, jumping castles, and basic inflatable slides with no moving parts.

  • Bounce houses & jump castles
  • Combo units (bounce + slide)
  • Inflatable slides under 20 ft
High-Risk Modifier

Mechanical & Moving-Part Inflatables

Units with motorized components, rotating obstacles, or interactive mechanics — higher participant injury potential.

  • Meltdown / Wipeout spinners
  • Wrecking Ball
  • Obstacle courses with moving elements
  • Interactive inflatable games
High-Risk Modifier

Water-Related Units

Water exposure requires its own operational discipline — anchoring, water quality, and supervision all change.

  • Inflatable water slides
  • Splash pads & water devices
  • Inflatable pools
  • Dunk tanks
High-Risk Modifier

Slides Over 20 Feet

Tall slides fall into their own underwriting bucket. Expect extra questions on anchoring, supervision, and rider rules.

  • Giant dry slides
  • Tower slides
  • Multi-lane tall slides
Related

Obstacle Courses

Multi-element inflatable courses for kids, teens, and adults. Participant-liability language is essential.

  • Kids' obstacle courses
  • Adult-scale courses
  • Competition-format courses
Related

Concessions & Ancillary

Tents, tables, chairs, generators, and related event rental items frequently bundled with inflatables.

  • Tents, tables, chairs
  • Generators & blowers
  • Arcade games & concessions

Who Needs Rental Business Coverage

If your business owns units, delivers them, sets them up, or rents them out — you need commercial operator coverage, not a party-host policy.

Mobile Rental Operators

Delivery, setup, takedown, and transportation across multiple venues and states.

Fixed-Site Operators

Permanent inflatable parks, indoor play centers, and seasonal outdoor operations.

Event & Festival Vendors

Fairs, festivals, carnivals, and corporate events with per-event COI requirements.

School & Municipal Vendors

Field days, fun runs, and community events that demand specific wording and limits.

Water Park & Splash Operators

Seasonal water-inflatable operators with higher participant exposure and supervision demands.

Party & Event Rental Companies

Full-service rental shops bundling inflatables with tents, tables, chairs, and concessions.

What Coverage Looks Like

Commercial inflatable rental policies are built around general liability with specific participant-injury language, plus the property and transport pieces that come with a rental fleet.

General Liability

Third-party bodily injury and property damage tied to setup, operation, takedown, and transport.

Participant Liability

Specific language covering rider and participant injury — falls, collisions, wind events, and anchoring failures.

Inland Marine / Equipment

Coverage for your units, blowers, generators, and gear in transit, at events, and in storage.

Commercial Auto

Trailers, box trucks, and tow vehicles used to deliver and retrieve inflatable units.

Hired & Non-Owned Auto

Coverage when employees or contractors use their own vehicles for deliveries or crew transport.

Contract Endorsements

Additional Insured, Primary & Non-Contributory, and Waiver of Subrogation for venues, schools, and municipalities.

Commercial Umbrella / Excess

Higher limits for operators working schools, municipalities, and large event venues that demand them.

Workers' Comp

Coverage for setup crews, delivery drivers, and event-day staff. Often legally required above a certain payroll.

High-Risk Modifiers That Change Pricing

These are the details underwriters zero in on. Disclose them up front — hiding them doesn't help the quote and can void coverage at claim time.

Mechanical / Moving Parts

Motorized components, rotating obstacles, or spinning elements.

Over 20 Feet Height

Giant slides, tower slides, or tall obstacle features.

Water Exposure

Any unit with water — slides, splash pads, pools, or dunk tanks.

Unattended Equipment

Units left operational without an on-site operator present.

Customer Pick-Up

Clients taking delivery and setting up inflatables themselves.

Free Use / Free Rides

Units offered without charge at fundraisers, community events, or promotions.

Overnight Storage On-Site

Units left inflated or staged overnight at an event location.

No Operator Supervision

Customer-supervised use without a trained attendant present.

What Underwriters Look For

Inflatables are a controllable exposure when the operation is documented and disciplined. These controls directly affect pricing and appetite.

Operational & Safety Controls

  • Operator training program and documentation
  • Manufacturer guidelines followed on every setup
  • Routine inspection schedule for every unit
  • Documented maintenance and repair logs
  • Equipment anchoring procedures — stakes, sandbags, or indoor tie-downs
  • Weather monitoring procedures with wind thresholds
  • Inclement weather shutdown protocol in writing
  • Minimum age and weight restrictions posted and enforced
  • Product wear monitoring and retirement schedule
  • Equipment testing procedures before and after each event

Participant Liability Controls

  • Signed waiver requirement for every participant
  • Parent or guardian consent procedures for minors
  • Bilingual waivers (English / Spanish) where relevant
  • Participant risk acknowledgment language
  • Pre-existing condition screening where appropriate
  • Right to refuse unsafe or intoxicated participants
  • Right to stop ride and clear the unit at any time
  • Verbal risk disclosure before participation
  • Waivers stored permanently — digital storage accepted
  • Enforcement of posted safety rules on every unit

Underwriting Data Points That Drive Pricing

Have these ready before submission. A complete picture gets a faster, cleaner quote.

Business & Financial Data

  • Annual gross revenue
  • Annual payroll
  • Years in business
  • Number of locations
  • States of operation
  • Fixed site vs mobile operation
  • Travel radius or delivery range
  • 5 years of loss runs (or no-loss letter)

Fleet & Operations Data

  • Number of devices / total unit count
  • Unit mix — static, mechanical, water, over-20-ft
  • Number of operators
  • Full-time vs part-time operators
  • Independent contractor usage
  • Cost of subcontracted labor
  • Whether customer pick-up is allowed
  • Whether free-use or donated events are part of the mix

What You'll Need To Get Approved

Assemble these before you submit. A complete package signals to the underwriter that the operation is professionally run.

01

Participant Waiver

Your signed waiver template with risk acknowledgment and storage policy.

02

Rental Agreement

Client-facing rental contract covering use, supervision, and hold-harmless wording.

03

Equipment Inventory

Full list of every unit with make, model, size, year, and category.

04

Equipment Photos

Photos of every unit — exterior, interior, anchoring points, and condition.

05

5 Years Loss Runs

Loss reports from every prior carrier, or a no-loss letter if newly established.

06

Safety Rules & Procedures

Written SOPs for setup, operation, takedown, and emergency response.

07

Weather Protocol

Written wind-threshold and inclement-weather shutdown policy.

08

Insurance Application

Completed intake. Vague applications get vague quotes — or no quote at all.

Where These Units Get Rented

We write inflatable rental operators servicing a wide mix of venues and event types.

Birthday Parties Schools Field Days Fairs Festivals Carnivals Corporate Events Church & Community Fundraisers Municipalities Weddings Private Parties Colleges Water Parks Pop-Up Activations

Inflatable Rental Insurance FAQ

Questions we get most often from rental operators and event vendors.

What's the difference between this and bounce house insurance?

Our Inflatables & Bounce House page covers consumer-facing and short-term event scenarios. This page is for commercial operators running a rental business — delivering, setting up, and taking down units across multiple events. The coverage structure, limits, and underwriting approach are materially different.

Do mechanical inflatables cost more to insure?

Generally, yes. Units with moving parts — Meltdown, Wipeout, Wrecking Ball, spinning obstacles — carry higher participant injury potential than static bounce houses. Underwriters will ask about operator training, supervision ratios, age and weight restrictions, and how often the mechanicals are inspected. Disclose the mix of mechanical vs static units up front.

What about water slides and water units?

Water exposure is its own underwriting bucket. Expect questions about water source, drainage, supervision, pool depth, slip-and-fall risk, and whether lifeguards are on-site for larger setups. Water units often carry higher premiums than comparable dry units.

Can I allow customer pick-up?

Customer pick-up is a high-risk modifier. When a client picks up a unit, sets it up themselves, and supervises it, you lose control of anchoring, supervision, and weather response. Many carriers either exclude customer pick-up entirely or price it materially higher. If you offer it, it must be disclosed.

What happens if wind lifts a unit?

Wind events are one of the most serious exposures in this class. Proper anchoring, documented weather protocols, and early shutdown procedures are what protect participants — and they're what underwriters expect to see. Unanchored or poorly anchored units that lift in wind have caused some of the most severe claims in the industry.

How much does inflatable rental insurance cost?

Pricing depends on revenue, unit count, unit mix, travel radius, loss history, and the limits venues require. Clean operations with documented SOPs, strong anchoring discipline, signed waivers, and no losses generally price materially better than vague or undocumented accounts. Incomplete applications frequently come back with no quote.

Do I need commercial auto for my trailer?

Usually yes. If a vehicle or trailer is used to deliver rental units, commercial auto typically applies. Personal auto policies often exclude business use. Hired and non-owned auto may also be needed if employees or contractors use their own vehicles for deliveries.

What limits do schools and municipalities require?

Most schools, parks departments, and municipalities require $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate at minimum, often with a $1M–$5M umbrella. Many also demand Additional Insured, Primary & Non-Contributory, and Waiver of Subrogation wording. Share the venue requirements early so the policy is built to the contract, not just a default limit.

What gets an inflatable rental submission declined?

The usual reasons: no signed waivers, no written weather protocol, undocumented anchoring procedures, customer pick-up without disclosure, missing loss runs, undisclosed water or over-20-ft units, and vague descriptions of operations. Our declinations page walks through the most common reasons submissions get rejected.

Can Kelly Insurance Group help nationwide?

Yes. KIG writes inflatable rental operators across the United States — mobile operators, fixed sites, seasonal operators, and full-service rental shops. Call or text East at 412-212-2800 or West at 310-561-1917.

Ready To Quote Your Inflatable Rental Business?

The same intake form covers every amusement and entertainment device class we write — inflatables, mechanical bulls, axe throwing, ziplines, rock walls, and more. Complete it once and our team will route it to the right market.