Standard Form

What Is a Standard Form in Insurance?

A standard form is an insurance policy form that uses the same base wording across many insurers.

When a policy uses a standard form, the core language stays the same no matter which carrier issues it. Insurers build policies by starting with a standard form and then adding endorsements to modify coverage.

These forms are developed by industry organizations, not individual insurance companies. Common creators include Insurance Services Office, Inc. (ISO), American Association of Insurance Services (AAIS), the Surety Association of America (SAA), National Council on Compensation Insurance, Inc. (NCCI), and similar groups.

How Do Standard Forms Work in Insurance?

Standard forms act as the foundation of a policy. The base form outlines what’s covered, what’s excluded, and how claims are handled. Carriers then attach endorsements to add, remove, or change coverage to fit a specific business.

Two policies may look similar because they use the same standard form, but endorsements can still create meaningful differences.

Standard forms are common in lines like general liability, commercial property, workers’ compensation, and commercial auto.

Standard forms are like the off-the-shelf templates, proprietary forms are the store brand, and manuscript forms are custom-made.

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Form What It Is Pros Cons

Standard form

Widely used, prewritten wording shared across the market

– Familiar to agents and adjusters
– Easier to compare

– May feel generic
– Still needs endorsements to fit your business

Proprietary carrier form

Wording created by a specific carrier for its own policies

– Can bundle useful coverages
– Tailored to the company’s niche

– Harder to compare
– Fewer people know the fine print
– May hide unique exclusions

Manuscript form

Custom wording drafted for a specific account

– Very tailored to unusual or large risks

– Rare for small businesses
– More complex to understand

Standard forms help create consistency for agents and claims professionals, so they’re more familiar with how coverage works and can assist customers more effectively.

The baseline coverage in a standard form can then be altered with endorsements, allowing insurance companies to customize coverage to meet the unique needs of each customer.

Standard forms appear in many business policies:

  • General Liability
  • Commercial Property
  • Businessowners Policy (BOP)
  • Workers Compensation
  • Commercial Auto


How to Use “Standard Form” to Your Advantage

  • Ask which standard form your policy uses
  • Request the form name or number
  • Review the forms and endorsements listed on your declarations page
  • Compare quotes at the form and endorsement level, not just price and limits
  • Ask what endorsements change the base form and why
  • Confirm how claims are handled under that form

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    Exclusions

    This policy is not designed to cover:

    • Industrial control engineers
    • Defense contractors
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    • Crypto exchanges
    • Gambling platforms
    • Physical security system installers
    •  Heavy equipment integrators

     

    Not available if you manage or control systems involving:

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    • If you build firmware or embedded software controlling industrial physical equipment.
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    • National defense
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    • Weapons
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    • If more than 25% of your revenue comes from:
      • Federal government work
      • Military or defense operations
    • If more than 50% of your revenue comes from:
    • Equipment installation
    • Maintenance
    • Physical service work



    Restricted if you work in:

    • Ride-sharing platforms
    • Equipment sharing platforms
    • For-rent-by-owner platforms
    • Help-for-hire platforms
    • Delivery services
    • Banking or financial services
    • Cryptocurrency / blockchain / NFTs
    • Geospatial mapping / aerial photography
    • GPS systems
    • Gambling or gaming
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