Custom Harvest Insurance
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Insurance for Custom Harvesters, Contract Cutting Crews, and Agricultural Contractors
Custom harvest operations are unlike any other agricultural business. You run a fleet of combines, grain carts, semis, and support vehicles across multiple states on a seasonal circuit. Your crew works long hours in extreme conditions on someone else's land. Your equipment is worth $700,000 to over $1 million per rig. And you are subject to a patchwork of FMCSA agricultural exemptions, state-by-state workers compensation requirements, and DOT regulations that change depending on what you are hauling and where you are hauling it.
Most insurance agents have never written a custom harvest account. They do not understand the multi-state exposure, the seasonal fleet patterns, the H2A labor requirements, or the FMCSA exemptions that apply to your operation. Grit Insurance Group does. We build programs for agricultural contractors who work across state lines, and we place coverage with carriers who know how to underwrite mobile agricultural operations.
Custom Harvest Operations We Insure
- Wheat harvest operations - the classic wheat harvest circuit runs from Texas and Oklahoma in late May through Kansas in June-July, Nebraska and South Dakota in July-August, and the Dakotas and Montana in August-September. Multi-combine operations covering 2,000+ miles of seasonal travel with full support fleets.
- Corn and soybean harvest crews - fall harvest operations running combines, grain carts, and hauling equipment across Midwest states. Corn harvest rigs run larger headers and higher-capacity equipment than wheat operations.
- Hay and forage custom cutters - swathing, baling, stacking, and hauling operations for hay, alfalfa, and silage. These operations run windrowers, balers, stackers, and transport equipment on a seasonal circuit.
- Custom planting and spraying operations - agricultural contractors who provide planting, spraying, and tillage services under contract. These operations carry similar multi-state, seasonal equipment exposure as harvest crews.
- Specialty crop harvest - sunflowers, sorghum, cotton, canola, and other crops requiring specialized harvesting equipment and crew expertise.
Why Custom Harvest Insurance Is Different From Standard Farm Insurance
Multi-State Fleet Exposure
A custom harvest operation may work in 5 to 8 states during a single season. Each state has different commercial auto requirements, workers compensation mandates, and liability thresholds. Your insurance program needs to cover your fleet in every state on your circuit - not just your home state. Kansas 2024 custom rate data shows average combine rates of $34.22/acre for soybeans and $39.84/acre for corn, with new combines costing $400,000 to $600,000+ per unit. A full harvest rig - combine, header, grain cart, and semi - represents $700,000 to over $1 million in rolling equipment value.
FMCSA Agricultural Exemptions - What You Get and What You Do Not
Under 49 CFR 391.2, custom harvest drivers are exempt from certain FMCSA requirements when transporting farm machinery or custom-harvested crops:
- CDL physical qualification requirements (Part 391 Subpart E) - exempt
- Hours of service (Part 395) - exempt during planting/harvest season within 150 air miles
- ELD/electronic logging - exempt within 150-air-mile radius
- Federal operating authority (MC number) - exempt when hauling exempt agricultural commodities
What you are NOT exempt from: USDOT number requirements for interstate equipment transport, Unified Carrier Registration (UCR) for interstate operations, vehicle safety inspections on combination vehicles, and insurance requirements under 49 CFR Part 387 for non-exempt hauling. Your insurance agent needs to understand which trips are exempt and which are not - because your coverage requirements change depending on the load.
H2A Workers and Surety Bond Requirements
Custom combining is specifically recognized in federal H2A regulations (20 CFR 655.300-655.304) as a unique itinerary-based activity requiring special employment authorization across multiple states. The Department of Labor certified nearly 370,000 H2A temporary agricultural jobs in 2022 - up 7x from 2005. If you use H2A workers, you need an H2A surety bond. This is a natural fit with Grit's surety bonding program - we write the bond and the insurance under one relationship.
Workers Compensation Gaps Across State Lines
15 states do not require workers compensation for agricultural workers: Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, North Dakota, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Wyoming. If your crew works in any of these states without voluntary workers comp coverage, you carry the full liability for any injury. South Dakota specifically requires workers comp when agricultural workers operate hazardous equipment including grain combines - directly applicable to your operation.
The correct NCCI workers compensation classification for custom harvest operations is Code 0050 - Farm Machinery Operation by Contractor and Drivers. Make sure your policy uses this code, not a general farming classification.
Equipment Operating on Someone Else's Land
Your combines, grain carts, and support vehicles operate on land you do not own. If your equipment damages a field, a fence, a road, a bridge, or a drainage tile, you are liable. If your semi damages a county road or a private drive, you are liable. Your general liability policy needs to specifically cover operations on third-party property, and your commercial auto policy needs to cover equipment operation on both public roads and private farmland.
Coverage for Custom Harvest Operations
- Commercial Auto and Fleet Insurance - semis, grain trucks, grain carts, pickup trucks, and support vehicles operating across multiple states. Your fleet policy needs multi-state filings and must account for seasonal route patterns. Coverage for hired and non-owned vehicles is important for operations that rent additional trucks during peak harvest.
- Inland Marine / Equipment Insurance - combines, headers, grain carts, windrowers, balers, and support equipment. These assets are mobile by definition and not at a fixed location - inland marine is the correct coverage form, not standard property insurance. Schedule each unit at replacement value.
- Cargo Insurance - harvested grain in transit from field to elevator or storage. Your auto policy does not cover the value of the cargo. If a loaded grain truck overturns, cargo insurance covers the grain loss.
- Commercial General Liability - bodily injury and property damage from your operations on third-party land. Covers crop damage, property damage, and injury claims from landowners, their employees, and third parties.
- Workers Compensation Insurance - crew injuries from equipment operation, grain handling, and field work. Voluntary coverage recommended for all states on your circuit regardless of state mandates. Classification Code 0050.
- Umbrella / Excess Liability Insurance - excess limits above your GL, auto, and employers liability. Multi-state operations with large equipment fleets and seasonal crews should carry $2M to $5M minimum in umbrella coverage.
- H2A Surety Bond - required for operations using H2A temporary agricultural workers. Grit writes surety bonds as a core product - we handle the bond and the insurance under one program.
- Employers Practices Liability Insurance - protects against employment-related claims from seasonal crew members including wrongful termination, discrimination, and wage disputes. Important for operations managing large seasonal workforces.
Regulatory Framework for Custom Harvesters
- FMCSA Agricultural Exemptions - CDL, hours of service, and ELD exemptions for custom harvest operations
- OSHA Agricultural Hazards - tractor rollover, PTO entanglement, grain engulfment, and equipment safety
- OSHA 1928.57 - Guarding of farm field equipment (PTO guards, nip point guards, lockout/tagout)
- OSHA 29 CFR 1910.272 - Grain Handling Facilities standard (applies to commercial grain handling at fixed facilities)
- 20 CFR 655.300-655.304 - H2A temporary agricultural worker regulations for custom combining operations
- 49 CFR Part 387 - FMCSA insurance requirements for commercial motor vehicles (applies to non-exempt hauling)
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does custom harvest insurance cost?
Costs depend on the number of combines, total fleet size, number of crew members, states on your circuit, and claims history. A single-combine operation might pay $15,000 to $25,000 per year for a full program (auto, equipment, GL, workers comp). A multi-combine operation with 5+ rigs, 20+ crew members, and an 8-state circuit could pay $75,000 to $150,000 or more. Equipment values are the biggest driver - insuring $3 million to $5 million in rolling equipment is the largest single premium line.
Do I need a USDOT number for my custom harvest operation?
If you transport equipment or non-exempt commodities across state lines using vehicles over 10,001 pounds GVWR, you need a USDOT number. Custom harvesters transporting farm machinery to harvest sites and hauling harvested grain to market are generally exempt from federal operating authority (MC number) requirements, but the USDOT registration and Unified Carrier Registration (UCR) requirements still apply to interstate operations.
What happens if my combine damages a farmer's field or property?
Your commercial general liability policy covers property damage claims from landowners. If your equipment damages a field, fence, irrigation system, drainage tile, or road on the property you are harvesting, your GL responds. Make sure your policy specifically covers operations on third-party land - some policies limit coverage to your own premises.
Do I need workers comp in states that do not require it for farm workers?
You do not legally need it in those 15 states, but you carry the full liability exposure without it. If a crew member is seriously injured operating a combine in Kansas (which does not require ag workers comp), you face a personal injury lawsuit with no insurance to respond. Voluntary workers comp coverage on your full crew, in every state on your circuit, is the only way to close this gap.
Can Grit handle my H2A surety bond and my insurance together?
Yes. Surety bonds are a core Grit product. We write the H2A bond and place your commercial insurance program under one relationship. One agent, one program, one renewal cycle. That is the advantage of working with a brokerage that specializes in both surety and commercial coverage.
Why Custom Harvesters Work With Grit
- Independent brokerage - we access multiple carriers to find the best fit for mobile agricultural operations
- We understand FMCSA agricultural exemptions, multi-state workers comp requirements, and DOT compliance
- Surety bond specialists - we write H2A bonds as a core product alongside your insurance program
- Experience with high-value equipment schedules, seasonal fleet patterns, and multi-state filings
- Agricultural roots - we understand harvest operations from the ground up
Your crew is on the road and your equipment is in the field. Your insurance needs to keep up. Call us at (801) 505-5500 or start a quote online.
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Grain & Row Crop Insurance |
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Custom Harvest Insurance
Your operation is unique. Your insurance program should be too. We take the time to understand your fleet, your crew, your circuit, and your growth plans before we make a single recommendation.