SAME DAY FILM PRODUCTION
INSURANCE CERTIFICATE
Rental house picks up tomorrow. Permit office closes at 4. Location wants the COI before they sign. Same-day certificate of insurance issuance for film productions when the timeline is already moving.
PRODUCTION DOESN'T WAIT FOR PAPERWORK
The shoot moves at the speed of the call sheet. The COI needs to move at the same speed — which means a broker who treats rush issuance as part of the workflow, not an exception.
Same day film production insurance certificate issuance is a real-world need on virtually every active production. The producer realizes the location wants a COI today. The DP gets a call from the rental house holding the gear. The line producer realizes the city permit office closes in three hours. None of these are exotic problems — they happen on every shoot.
What changes between brokers is how the rush is handled. We treat same-day COI issuance as a normal part of placing feature film insurance — not a special favor. When the underlying coverage is bound, certificates can be generated and emailed quickly with the additional insured language each party requires. Most production rush situations come down to two things: whether the coverage is already in force and whether the additional insured details have been confirmed.
This applies across the production spectrum — short film shoots, indie features, equipment rental pickups, and full DICE-covered productions all face the same rush certificate scenarios.
HOW FAST WE CAN ACTUALLY MOVE
Speed depends on what's already in place. Here's a realistic look at what's possible at each stage of the rush — from "we already have a policy" through "we need to bind something brand new today."
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⚡FASTEST PATH
EXISTING POLICY + ADDITIONAL INSURED
Coverage is already in force. The new COI just needs the new additional insured added. The fastest scenario — typically same-day issuance once the AI details are confirmed.
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⚙QUICK PATH
EXISTING POLICY + ENDORSEMENT NEEDED
Coverage is in force but the policy needs a small endorsement — adding a state, location, or specific language. Often same-day, sometimes next-business-day depending on the carrier.
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⏱STANDARD PATH
NEW SHORT-TERM POLICY
No existing policy — a brand-new short-term production policy needs to be quoted and bound. Same-day binding is realistic when the production submits clean, complete information.
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▣EXTENDED PATH
SPECIALTY OR HIGH-RISK COVERAGE
Stunts, pyro, weapons, drone, or other specialty risks require carrier underwriting beyond a standard short-term policy. Plan ahead — these placements typically take longer than a single business day.
SIX SITUATIONS WE HANDLE EVERY WEEK
These aren't hypotheticals. These are the rush scenarios that come through our office on a regular basis from active film productions.
SCENARIO 01
RENTAL HOUSE PICKUP TOMORROW
Camera house won't release the package without a COI naming them as additional insured and loss payee. Pickup is in the morning.
SCENARIO 02
LOCATION SIGNS TODAY OR LOSES IT
Restaurant, home, or private location wants the COI today before they'll sign the location agreement. Tomorrow they're booking another shoot.
SCENARIO 03
CITY PERMIT OFFICE DEADLINE
Municipal film office needs proof of insurance today to issue the permit for tomorrow's shoot. Office closes at 4 — the COI needs to be in their inbox by then.
SCENARIO 04
CLIENT REQUEST FOR AI
Brand client just emailed asking for them to be named as additional insured on the production's existing policy. They want it before the shoot starts.
SCENARIO 05
LAST-MINUTE LOCATION ADD
Production picked up an additional location they didn't have when the policy was bound. New COI with new AI required before they can shoot there.
SCENARIO 06
UNION SIGNATORY DEADLINE
SAG-AFTRA, IATSE, or DGA signatory paperwork requires specific COI language and additional insureds before talent is cleared to work.
WHAT ACTUALLY SLOWS DOWN A RUSH
The "same day" promise depends on a clean submission. Here are the friction points that turn a same-day request into a multi-day scramble — most of them are avoidable on the production side.
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01
INCOMPLETE INTAKE
Missing shoot dates, location addresses, equipment lists, or crew counts. Underwriters can't quote what they can't see.
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02
UNCONFIRMED ADDITIONAL INSUREDS
"They need to be named as additional insured" — but no one has the legal entity name and address. Without that, the certificate can't be issued.
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03
SPECIALTY RISK ON A STANDARD SUBMISSION
Stunts, pyro, weapons, or drone work disclosed late in the process — these need specialty placement that can't be rushed through standard channels.
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04
MULTI-STATE WITHOUT NOTICE
Production realizes mid-shoot they're crossing state lines for an unplanned location. State endorsements take time the rush window may not have.
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05
END-OF-DAY SUBMISSION
Submission lands at 4:30pm for a "same-day" certificate. Carriers generally don't process binding requests after hours — submission timing matters.
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06
UNCLEAR COVERAGE NEEDS
"Just send me a COI" — but for what coverage and what limits? Specific contract requirements need to be reviewed before a certificate can be accurately issued.
RUSH-PROOF YOUR PRODUCTION BEFORE IT STARTS
THE BEST RUSH IS THE ONE YOU AVOID
Most "same-day" certificate scrambles can be eliminated entirely with smart pre-production. If the underlying policy is already bound and the additional insureds are pre-loaded, every rush certificate becomes a 15-minute task instead of a same-day binding scramble.
Productions that build their production insurance program before pre-production wraps almost never face same-day crises. Here's the pre-game checklist that prevents rush-mode from ever activating:
- BIND THE POLICY EARLY
- PRE-LOAD ADDITIONAL INSUREDS
- CONFIRM ALL SHOOT STATES
- EQUIPMENT LIST BEFORE PICKUP
- UNION REQUIREMENTS REVIEWED
- CLEAR BROKER POINT-OF-CONTACT
- SPECIALTY RISK DISCLOSED EARLY
- LOCATION CONTRACT TEMPLATES READY
FOUR COVERAGE LINES TYPICALLY ON A FILM COI
A film production COI typically references multiple coverage lines. The certificate is just paper — the underlying policies are what actually responds when something goes wrong.
GENERAL LIABILITY
Third-party bodily injury and property damage at the shoot. The line that satisfies most permit and location requirements.
EQUIPMENT FLOATER
Rented and owned equipment in your care, custody, and control. The line rental houses focus on for additional insured language.
WORKERS COMP
Statutory crew injury coverage. State-mandated and frequently referenced on production COIs alongside general liability.
HIRED & NON-OWNED AUTO
Vehicle liability for vehicles used in production but not owned by the company. Common COI requirement for shoots with vehicle action.
QUESTIONS PRODUCTIONS ASK WHEN THE TIMER IS ON
CAN YOU REALLY ISSUE A COI THE SAME DAY?
WHAT INFORMATION DO YOU NEED TO ISSUE A RUSH COI?
WHAT IF MY SHOOT IS TOMORROW MORNING AND IT'S 4PM TODAY?
CAN YOU ISSUE A COI FOR MY EXISTING POLICY THAT'S WITH ANOTHER BROKER?
WHAT IF I'M ADDING A LOCATION AT THE LAST MINUTE?
CAN ONE COI NAME MULTIPLE ADDITIONAL INSUREDS?
WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A COI AND BEING BOUND?
DO YOU CHARGE EXTRA FOR RUSH ISSUANCE?
PICKUP IS TOMORROW. YOUR COI IS TODAY.
Same-day certificate of insurance issuance for film productions when the timeline is already moving. Submit the rush intake form right now and we'll get the clock started — or call directly for emergency situations.
THE COMPLETE FEATURE FILM INSURANCE LIBRARY
FEATURE FILM INSURANCE
The complete overview of feature film coverage — every spoke, every policy type, every budget tier.