Utility & Power Infrastructure Contractor Insurance
Utility and power infrastructure contractors work around public systems, energized equipment, substations, underground utilities, emergency restoration, specialized fleets, and contract requirements that can be far more demanding than ordinary construction work.
Kelly Insurance Group helps contractors explain the real operation: transmission and distribution work, substation support, underground utility construction, fiber and broadband infrastructure, temporary power, generator work, battery energy storage support, and critical infrastructure projects.
Substation / Electrical Equipment Yard
Substation work can involve energized equipment, transformer-related exposures, specialized vehicles, environmental concerns, utility contract requirements, and certificate language that should be reviewed before work begins.
Why this coverage deserves attention
Utility work does not behave like ordinary contracting.
A utility contractor may be working around public infrastructure, active service lines, underground facilities, substations, distribution systems, emergency restoration jobs, or customer sites where downtime creates serious pressure.
The insurance review should not describe the business as simply “electrical contracting” if the actual operation includes power infrastructure, utility support, distribution work, substation support, generator support, broadband infrastructure, underground utility work, or energy storage projects.
The right submission should explain the work clearly enough for underwriting to understand the operation, the contract requirements, the equipment, the vehicles, the employees, the subcontractors, and the sites where the work is performed.
Coverage structure
The program should match the infrastructure work.
Utility and power infrastructure contractors often need more than a basic contractor policy. The coverage conversation should follow the work: liability, vehicles, workers, equipment, pollution, contracts, certificates, subcontractors, and completed operations.
Commercial General Liability
Addresses bodily injury and property damage allegations arising from business operations, subject to policy terms, exclusions, endorsements, and completed operations provisions.
Completed Operations
Important when allegations arise after the contractor has finished work on utility systems, infrastructure, equipment, service connections, or project sites.
Umbrella / Excess Liability
Utility, municipal, industrial, and infrastructure contracts may require higher liability limits and specific certificate wording.
Commercial Auto
For service trucks, bucket trucks, utility vehicles, crew vehicles, trailers, and vehicles used to move people, tools, materials, or equipment.
Inland Marine
For tools, testing equipment, generators, jobsite materials, mobile equipment, and contractor property that moves between yards and jobsites.
Workers Compensation
Should be reviewed around the actual job duties, field conditions, employee classifications, subcontractor usage, and state requirements.
Pollution Liability
May be relevant for fuel, transformer oil, excavation, contaminated soil, batteries, emergency generators, older equipment, or cleanup allegations.
Professional Liability
Should be reviewed when the contractor provides design, engineering coordination, consulting, system planning, inspection, or advisory services.
Certificates of Insurance
Utility contractors often need fast certificate handling for utilities, general contractors, municipalities, facilities, and project owners.
The contract should be reviewed before the certificate request.
Utility contracts may include additional insured wording, waiver of subrogation, primary and noncontributory language, umbrella requirements, pollution requirements, auto requirements, workers compensation requirements, and subcontractor obligations. The certificate should reflect the actual policy and contract review, not guesswork.
Utility contractor operations
Different infrastructure work creates different insurance questions.
A contractor building underground broadband infrastructure does not have the same exposure as a substation support contractor, temporary power provider, BESS contractor, or transmission contractor.
Power line and grid-support work
Review jobsite conditions, equipment, vehicles, employee duties, subcontractors, contract requirements, service interruption exposure, and any energized or utility-controlled work.
Electrical equipment and utility-yard operations
Substation work may involve specialized equipment, transformer-related exposures, environmental concerns, access controls, and utility contract requirements.
Trenching, conduit, HDD, and utility crossings
Underground work can involve utility strikes, locating, excavation, public right-of-way work, traffic control, subcontractors, and pollution or cleanup allegations.
Generators, rental equipment, and emergency support
Temporary power work may involve equipment rental, fuel, transport, jobsite setup, service calls, event support, storm response, and certificates for project owners.
Critical-load environments
Data center contractor work can involve downtime sensitivity, electrical coordination, backup power, precision cooling connections, owner requirements, and specialized certificate wording.
Battery energy storage support
Battery energy storage work should be reviewed for installation scope, electrical work, site access, fire protection coordination, environmental concerns, contracts, and completed operations.
How the conversation usually starts
A better submission gets the account taken seriously.
The goal is simple: give underwriters a clean, accurate picture of the operation before they start filling in blanks themselves.
Define the work
Separate transmission, distribution, substation, underground utility, fiber, generator, BESS, and temporary power operations.
Share the contracts
Review insurance requirements before certificates are requested or work begins.
List the fleet
Identify trucks, trailers, bucket trucks, generators, rented equipment, and scheduled mobile equipment.
Review the program
Look at GL, auto, workers compensation, inland marine, umbrella, pollution, professional liability, and COIs together.
Helpful Kelly Insurance Group pages
Related insurance pages for utility and infrastructure contractors.
These pages may help if your operation also involves data centers, broadband infrastructure, elevator or vertical-transport systems, temporary power, battery energy storage, umbrella limits, pollution review, or certificate support.
Why Kelly Insurance Group
Utility contractors need more than a fast certificate.
This is a contract-heavy, equipment-heavy, documentation-heavy class. The agent matters. The submission matters. The way the work is explained matters.
Our team
We are proud of our agents because specialty contractor accounts need people who understand underwriting, documentation, communication, urgency, and the difference between ordinary contracting and infrastructure work.
Meet the TeamOur history
Kelly Insurance Group has a deep Pittsburgh insurance history and continues to build modern specialty insurance workflows around real client needs, difficult submissions, and non-generic commercial risks.
Read Our HistoryClient portal access for most customers
Once you become a customer, most customers are given access to our custom client portal, where certificates of insurance can be generated at any time. That matters when utilities, project owners, municipalities, general contractors, or facility managers need documentation quickly.
Questions contractors ask
Utility contractor insurance FAQ.
Start the conversation
Tell us what kind of utility infrastructure work you perform.
Use the form to start the conversation. The more specific you are about your operations, contracts, vehicles, equipment, and project requirements, the better the submission can be prepared for underwriting review.
- Transmission or distribution work
- Substation support
- Underground utility construction
- Fiber or broadband infrastructure
- Temporary power or generators
- Battery energy storage support
- Utility contract requirements
- Certificate-heavy accounts