Higginbotham + Amwins

We're here as your trusted partner through industry change. Our goal is to help you win.

Let's talk about how we can partner for your success.

Partnering with Amwins is more than a business transaction. As the nation's largest wholesaler, our specialized brokers and underwriters have the expertise, knowledge, and relationships of our entire firm at their fingertips – giving Higginbotham a distinct advantage.

 

 

Contact your Amwins broker or underwriter to discuss account needs. If you don't have any Amwins relationship, contact:

Audrey Johnston
Vice President
Amwins Insurance Brokerage, LLC - Atlanta, GA
404.920.3679 audrey.johnston@amwins.com
Rich Marburg
Client Relationship Manager
Amwins Access Insurance Services - Charlotte, NC
215.740.2256 rich.marburg@amwins.com

Amwins delivers tailored solutions backed by

handshake icon

$44.5B

annual premium placements, including $271M with Higginbotham.

2,200,000

submissions received annually


43,000

underwriter relationships

Explore our in-house solutions

Data & Analytics

Amwins DNA is the wholesale industry’s most in-depth collection of insurance data. Our data is used to support our broker/underwriter teams and retail clients with market intelligence, benchmarking reports, and much more.

Learn more

Amwins InstantQuote

Amwins IQ provides firm, bindable quotes from multiple carriers within minutes. Targeting small and middle market businesses, our digital solutions combine the ease and convenience of online quoting with the scale of the nation’s largest wholesaler.

Quote now

Amwins Claims

Our team leverages technical knowledge, strategic advocacy, strong relationships, and a client-first approach to ensure claims are handled with precision and care.

Learn More

 

 

Market insights from Amwins

Our insight on emerging issues and trends in the marketplace gives you an advantage with your clients and helps you prepare them for what lies ahead.

Navigating Unbundled Business Auto Coverage

Jun 25, 2026, 19:19
The shift to unbundled coverage is reshaping how transportation underwriters view business auto risk and raising the stakes for insureds seeking competitive monoline quotes. Here's how you can help.
Title : Navigating Unbundled Business Auto Coverage
Anchor Image Vertically : Center
Disable comments : Yes
State of the market : No
Date : Jun 2, 2026, 04:00
  • The shift to unbundled coverage is reshaping how transportation underwriters view business auto risk and raising the stakes for insureds seeking competitive monoline quotes.
  • Safety and transparency are becoming key differentiators. Underwriters are increasingly requiring firms to present telematics data even before the quoting stage, including driving behavior, mileage, and safety investments.
  • Often moving from the standard to the E&S market can result in sticker shock. However, accounts that invest in safety consultants, that can show they’ve tightened up operations, may stair-step back to better terms much faster.

For years, business auto coverage was quietly bundled into large commercial insurance packages where general liability, property and workers’ compensation took center stage.

As loss ratios have worsened, insurers are rethinking this model, unbundling auto insurance from packages and pushing it into the specialty market.

The shift is reshaping how transportation underwriters view business auto risk and raising the stakes for insureds seeking competitive monoline quotes.

That realization has led to widespread non-renewals of just the auto portion of packaged policies. Retail carriers are forcing insureds, particularly those with mixed fleets or specialty exposures, into the wholesale channel.

The result is an influx of submissions and a scramble for capacity in the specialty market.

 

Hired and non-owned: No longer an afterthought

One of the biggest changes involves hired and non-owned auto (HNOA). Historically, HNOA was automatically included in standard market packages. In the specialty space, however, it now faces intense scrutiny.

Carriers require specific applications, profit and loss statements, and full details on exposures. They want to know exactly what they’re picking up, and they’ll price it accordingly.

Underwriters now rate HNOA closer to owned vehicles, narrowing coverage and raising premiums. That means insureds must be prepared to provide much more detail and expect that costs will rise.

 

Business auto vs. transportation for hire: A different calculus

Another nuance is the difference between business auto and for-hire trucking. While trucking operations are subject to federal filings and extensive reporting, business auto is more diffuse.

Business is a broad segment and can cover everything from construction contractors to propane distributors to school buses. There are countless subcategories, and each comes with its own underwriting considerations.

With trucking, it’s straightforward. However, with business auto, the variations are endless, and the exposures don’t fit neatly into trucking markets or light commercial markets. That’s why so many of these risks are migrating to the E&S market.

Public auto is an area drawing scrutiny. Passenger transport, especially buses, requires high liability limits, often up to $5 million.

 

Positioning clients for a competitive quote

In a market where business auto is being carved out and underwritten independently, preparation is critical.

Safety and transparency are becoming key differentiators. Underwriters are increasingly requiring firms to present telematics data even before the quoting stage, including driving behavior, mileage, and safety investments.

For many insureds moving from the standard to the E&S market often face sticker shock. Premium increases can significantly double or triple while offering narrower coverage. But the accounts that invest in safety consultants, that can show they’ve tightened up operations, will stair-step back to better terms much faster.

 

A new reality for business auto

For now, the unbundling of business auto from packages looks set to continue. With claims severity and frequency still weighing on loss ratios, carriers show little appetite to return.

While the transition can be challenging, it also presents an opportunity. Insureds that invest in safety, refine their operations, and adapt to evolving underwriting expectations can ultimately build stronger risk profiles and more sustainable insurance programs

In this hard market, wholesalers play a crucial role in bridging the gap between insureds and specialty markets. Aside from market access, Amwins also brings in additional resources, including a claims advocacy team that can step in and fight tough claims on behalf of insureds.

To learn more about Amwins’ transportation capabilities, visit amwins.com/transportation.

  • Joe Krieg, Assistant Vice President with Amwins Brokerage
  • Evan Taylor, Senior Vice President with Amwins National Transportation Underwriters
Tags :
AmWINS Grouping :
  • Casualty
  • Transportation
Insights Category :
  • Casualty
  • Transportation
Related products
Related Articles