After a collision with an 18-wheeler, most people land on the same comforting assumption: the trucking company has insurance, so the bills will get covered.
That assumption is half right and half misleading. Commercial trucking insurance is its own world, with its own rules, its own coverage structures, and its own strategies for keeping payouts on a leash. The size of the policy in the file is almost never the size of the actual story.
Here’s a plain-English look at the parts of that world most accident victims don’t see.
1. Forget 30/60/25. The Numbers Here Are Much Bigger
Texas’s minimum auto insurance requirement is 30/60/25, meaning $30,000 per person, $60,000 per accident for bodily injury, and $25,000 for property damage. That’s the floor for an ordinary passenger vehicle.
Commercial trucks engaged in interstate commerce operate on a completely different scale. Federal minimums, set by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, generally include:
- $750,000 in liability coverage for most general freight carriers
- $1 million for carriers hauling certain types of oil
- $5 million for carriers hauling hazardous materials
Those are the federal floors. Many large carriers carry policies well above those numbers, often in the millions, sometimes tens of millions, depending on the freight and the company. The size mismatch between commercial trucking coverage and ordinary auto insurance is one of the most consequential differences between a truck accident case and a car accident case.
The first surprise for most accident victims is that those numbers exist. The second surprise is that even those numbers are usually only the beginning.
2. It’s Almost Never Just One Policy
Commercial truck coverage is typically built in layers, not slabs. A serious truck wreck can involve several insurance policies stacked on top of each other, including:
- The primary liability policy held by the motor carrier
- One or more excess or umbrella policies that kick in once the primary policy is exhausted
- A separate policy on the trailer, especially when the trailer is owned by a different entity than the truck
- A broker or shipper policy, where the entity that arranged the freight carries its own coverage
- An owner-operator policy, where the driver leases their truck to a carrier but maintains separate insurance
A wreck that looks like a single-policy situation on the surface can quickly turn into a coverage stack worth several million dollars once the layers get mapped. Most accident victims never see those layers because the first adjuster they talk to has zero incentive to mention them.
3. The MCS-90 Endorsement Is a Real Thing
This one is buried so deep that even some lawyers miss it.
Interstate motor carriers are generally required to carry a federal endorsement on their liability policies called the MCS-90 endorsement. Its purpose is to make sure that members of the public injured by a commercial truck can recover, even in situations where the underlying policy might otherwise exclude coverage.
In plain terms, the MCS-90 endorsement turns the insurer into a guarantor of certain claims. If the carrier’s normal policy would have denied coverage for some reason (driver outside scope, unauthorized use, cargo exclusions, and so on), the MCS-90 can still require the insurer to pay the injured public, then chase the carrier for reimbursement.
It’s a public-protection tool baked into the federal regulatory scheme, and it sits quietly in the back of many commercial trucking policies. Knowing it exists is the first step in understanding why a denial that sounds final on day three may not actually be final.
4. The “Who Actually Employs the Driver” Mess
In a typical car accident, the question “whose insurance covers this?” usually has one answer. In a typical truck accident, there can be four or five.
A single 18-wheeler on a Texas highway might involve all of the following at once:
- A driver who is technically an independent contractor
- An owner-operator company that owns the truck
- A motor carrier to which the driver is leased
- A trailer owner that’s a separate entity from the truck owner
- A broker who arranged the load
- A shipper that loaded the cargo
- A receiver that was supposed to take it
Each of those entities can carry its own insurance, and the question of which policy covers what depends on the relationships between them, the contracts they signed, and the activity the truck was engaged in at the moment of the wreck. The standard FMCSA “logo on the door” presumption helps in some cases, but plenty of trucking arrangements deliberately blur these lines for liability reasons.
Untangling who is actually on the hook, and whose insurance is actually available, is one of the slower, more technical parts of a serious truck case.
5. Self-Insured Carriers Change the Game
Some of the largest trucking companies don’t carry traditional insurance at all. They are self-insured, meaning they meet federal financial responsibility requirements through bonds, trust funds, or proof of net worth, and they pay claims directly out of their own pocket.
That changes the dynamic in a few ways:
- There’s no insurance company sitting between the claim and the carrier’s bottom line. Every dollar paid comes directly from the company’s resources.
- The “adjuster” in a self-insured case may be an internal claims department whose interests are aligned even more tightly with the carrier than a typical third-party insurer’s would be.
- Defense strategies tend to be aggressive because the company itself is footing the legal bill and the settlement bill out of the same pocket.
Self-insurance isn’t a loophole. It’s just a different posture, and it’s one most accident victims don’t expect to walk into.
6. Exclusions Can Make Coverage Look Like It Disappeared
Commercial trucking policies are full of exclusions. Some of the common ones include:
- Driving outside the scope of employment or dispatch
- Use of the vehicle for personal purposes (“non-trucking use”)
- Operating without the proper hazmat or specialty endorsement
- Unauthorized drivers behind the wheel
- Use of unauthorized vehicles
- Specific cargo types not covered under the policy
When one of these exclusions gets raised, the initial response from the insurer can sound like a complete denial of coverage. In practice, the situation is often more complicated than the denial letter suggests. Federal endorsements like the MCS-90 can override certain exclusions for the protection of the public, additional insured provisions in contracts between brokers and carriers can pull in coverage that isn’t immediately obvious, and the language of the policy itself often has more give than the first phone call would suggest.
An exclusion letter is the beginning of a coverage analysis, not the end of one.
7. The Stowers Doctrine: A Texas-Specific Power Tool
This is one of the most underappreciated features of the Texas legal landscape.
Under what’s commonly called the Stowers Doctrine, if an insurance company has the opportunity to settle a claim within the limits of its policy and unreasonably refuses to do so, it can be held responsible for the full amount of any later judgment, even if that judgment exceeds the policy limits.
In other words, an insurer that gambles on litigation and loses can be on the hook for the entire excess. The doctrine puts real financial pressure on insurers to settle reasonable claims rather than fight them to a jury verdict.
For commercial trucking cases, where injuries tend to be severe, and policy limits are sometimes the deciding factor in what an injured person can ultimately recover, the doctrine quietly shapes a lot of settlement behavior behind the scenes. Most accident victims have never heard of it. The carriers and their lawyers think about it constantly.
8. The Rapid Response Team Was at the Scene Before You Were Out of the ER
Major trucking insurers and self-insured carriers run rapid response teams specifically designed to be on the scene of a serious wreck within hours. Their job is to start building the defense before the evidence trail cools, which can include:
- Photographing the scene before vehicles are moved or roads are cleared
- Securing the truck itself for evidence preservation
- Downloading data from the truck’s event recorder (“black box”) and ELD before retention windows close
- Locating and interviewing witnesses
- Coordinating with company-side investigators and counsel
While the injured driver is still being assessed in the emergency department, the carrier’s investigation is already underway. That early head start is one of the reasons truck accident cases play out so differently from car accident cases, and one of the bigger reasons evidence preservation gets treated as urgent rather than routine.
9. Cargo Insurance Is Not the Insurance That Pays for Injuries
This is a small but common point of confusion.
Cargo insurance covers damage to the freight the truck is carrying. Liability insurance is what covers injuries to people involved in a wreck. They are entirely separate coverages, often issued under separate policies, and confusing one for the other can cause real misunderstandings about what’s actually available.
When someone says, “the trucking company has insurance,” it’s worth knowing which kind they’re talking about. For an injured person, the only kind that really matters is the liability stack.
The Bottom Line
Commercial trucking insurance is not a single policy with a single limit. It’s a system, with layers, federal endorsements, exclusions, contractual relationships, and Texas-specific doctrines like Stowers shaping how every claim plays out. Most accident victims walk into the early phase of a truck case knowing none of this, which is exactly the gap the system is built around.
The first offer from a truck insurer is almost never the ceiling of what’s available. The first denial is almost never the end of the coverage analysis. The first “policy limit” cited on the phone is almost never the only policy in play.
If something in your gut tells you the insurance picture you’re being shown is incomplete, the instinct to say “oh hell no” before accepting it as the whole story is usually picking up on exactly what’s been left out.
Disclaimer: This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every situation is different, and reading this article does not create an attorney-client relationship. Anyone who has been involved in a truck or car accident in Texas and has questions about their specific circumstances should consider speaking with a licensed Texas attorney.





