ACORD 25 Fillable PDF | Certificate of Liability Insurance

ACORD 25


ACORD 25 is the standardized Certificate of Liability Insurance – the most frequently requested and widely recognized insurance document in the United States. It serves as official evidence that an individual or business has specific types and amounts of insurance coverage in force.

This single-page form provides proof of:

  • Commercial General Liability (CGL) coverage
  • Automobile Liability insurance
  • Umbrella/Excess Liability coverage
  • Workers Compensation and Employers Liability
  • Other insurance coverages as applicable

Common scenarios requiring log book replacement

  • Proof of Coverage: Verifies that insurance policies exist and are currently active, showing specific policy numbers, coverage limits, and effective dates.
  • Contract Compliance: Demonstrates that insurance requirements specified in contracts, leases, or permits are being met.
  • Notification Tool: Certificate holders receive notice (typically 30 days) if policies are cancelled or materially changed.
  • Documentation: Creates official record of insurance status at a specific point in time for regulatory, contractual, or legal purposes.

Certificate of liability insurance are required in virtually every commercial business relationship where one party needs assurance that the other party has adequate insurance coverage.

  • General contractors requiring certificates from subcontractors
  • Project owners requiring certificates from all contractors
  • Bidding on construction projects
  • Obtaining building permits
  • Landlords requiring certificates from commercial tenants
  • Property managers collecting certificates annually
  • Lease agreement requirements
  • Event venue insurance verification
  • Client contracts requiring vendor insurance
  • Service agreements with insurance requirements
  • Vendor registration and qualification
  • Purchase orders over certain dollar amounts
  • Business license applications
  • Special event permits
  • Government contract requirements


ONLY the following authorized parties can legally issue certificates:

Licensed Insurance Agents

Agents who represent the insurance carrier and have written authority to bind coverage and issue certificates.

Licensed Insurance Brokers

Brokers who work on behalf of the insured but have authorization from the carrier to issue certificates.

Insurance Company Representatives

Direct employees of insurance carriers who are authorized to issue certificates for their company’s policies.

Authorized Producer Representatives

Licensed personnel working under supervision of licensed agents/brokers with specific authority.


  • Enter agency name exactly as it appears on letterhead
  • Provide complete mailing address including suite/unit
  • List name of specific agent/CSR preparing certificate
  • Include direct phone number with extension
  • Provide professional email address
  • Enter insured’s legal name EXACTLY as shown on policies
  • Include legal entity designation (LLC, Inc, Corp, etc.)
  • Provide complete business address
  • Triple-check spelling and formatting match policies
  • List each insurance company providing coverage
  • Use full legal company name (not marketing name)
  • Include 5-digit NAIC number for each carrier
  • Assign letters A-F to each carrier
  • Indicate which insurer provides each coverage (Letter A-F)
  • Check Additional Insured/Subrogation boxes if applicable
  • Enter exact policy numbers from declarations
  • Policy effective date – Format MM/DD/YYYY
  • Policy expiration date – Format MM/DD/YYYY
  • Enter ALL coverage limits from policy declarations
  • Enter certificate holder’s complete legal name
  • Provide full mailing address
  • Include attention line if needed
  • Verify spelling and address accuracy

📋 What Certificate Holders GET:

✓ Verification that insurance policies exist

✓ Information about policy numbers, limits, dates

✓ Notice (typically 30 days) if policies cancel

✗ NO insurance coverage of any kind

✗ NO protection for their own negligence

🛡️ What Additional Insureds GET:

✓ Right to make claims and receive defense

✓ Actual insurance coverage for claims against them

✓ Settlement or judgment payment up to policy limits

Requirements: Must be added via specific policy endorsement. Endorsement must be attached to policy. Cannot be created by certificate language alone.

Endorsement

What It Covers

CG 20 10

Owners, Lessees or Contractors – Ongoing operations only

CG 20 37

Owners, Lessees or Contractors – Completed operations only

CG 20 33

Automatic when required in construction agreement (blanket)

CG 20 26

Designated Person or Organization (broad coverage)


This single-page form provides proof of:

  • Commercial General Liability (CGL) coverage
  • Automobile Liability insurance
  • Umbrella/Excess Liability coverage
  • Workers Compensation and Employers Liability
  • Other insurance coverages as applicable

  • “Information only” – Shows coverage exists but doesn’t create coverage
  • “Confers no rights” – Certificate holder cannot enforce terms or make claims
  • “Does not amend coverage” – Cannot change policy terms through certificate

Typical insurance clause example:

Violation

Potential Penalties

Failing to provide certificate

Contract breach, project removal, withheld payments

Providing false certificate

Contract termination, damages, criminal charges

Letting coverage lapse

Personal liability, contract breach, indemnity obligations

Not adding required AI

Indemnification triggered, lawsuit damages

Issuing own certificates

$5K-$50K+ fines, criminal charges, policy cancellation


How long does it take to get an ACORD 25 certificate?

Most insurance agents can issue certificates within 24-48 hours. Many agencies with online portals offer instant generation. For complex requests requiring endorsements, allow 5-7 business days.

How much does an ACORD 25 certificate cost?

The certificate itself is typically free or $0-$50. However, endorsements cost extra: Additional insured $50-$200/year, Waiver of subrogation $50-$150, Primary/non-contributory $100-$300.

Can I get a certificate if my policy has lapsed?

No. Licensed professionals cannot issue certificates for inactive policies. This would be fraudulent misrepresentation. You must reinstate coverage first.

Do I need a new certificate for every contract?

It depends. If additional insured status is required for specific work, you need separate certificates referencing each contract. Best practice: new certificate for each significant contract.

Can certificates be emailed or must they be original?

Electronic PDF certificates are now standard and widely accepted. Original wet-signature copies are rarely required anymore.

What’s the difference between occurrence and claims-made?

Occurrence: Covers incidents during policy period regardless of when claim is filed. Claims-Made: Covers only claims filed during policy period. If you let claims-made lapse, you lose coverage for all prior acts unless you buy expensive “tail” coverage.

How often should certificates be updated?

At minimum: Annually at renewal, when policies change carriers/limits, when requested by certificate holders, for new projects. Best practice: Proactively send updated certificates 30 days before renewal.

What happens if I provide an expired certificate?

Immediate contract breach. Potential work stoppage, project removal, lease violation, license suspension. If your actual policy has lapsed, you’re uninsured and personally liable for any incidents.

Do certificates need to be notarized?

No. Certificates do not require notarization. They must be signed by the authorized insurance agent/broker, but notary stamps are not needed or standard.

Can I use the same certificate for multiple certificate holders?

No. Each certificate holder needs their own certificate with their name/address in the Certificate Holder section. You cannot issue one certificate to multiple parties.

What if my limits don’t meet contract requirements?

Options: (1) Increase your limits with carrier, (2) Purchase umbrella coverage for additional limits, (3) Negotiate contract terms, (4) Don’t take the contract – operating without required insurance is breach.