ACORD 140 Fillable Form | Property Section Application PDF

ACORD 140


The ACORD 140 form is the key to applying for commercial property insurance. It gathers all the important details about your buildings, business personal property, and potential income loss, giving insurers a clear picture of your risks. From construction type and occupancy to fire protection systems, every detail helps ensure your coverage matches your business needs.

This form also captures property values and loss history, which allows underwriters to accurately evaluate risk and determine fair premiums. By providing this comprehensive information, the ACORD 140 helps protect your business with the right insurance, so you can focus on running your operations with confidence.

What the ACORD 140 Form Covers

Physical structure including walls, roof, foundation, permanently installed fixtures, built-in equipment, and building improvements. Covers damage from fire, wind, hail, vandalism, and other perils.

Contents including furniture, equipment, inventory, supplies, computers, machinery, and tenant improvements. Coverage for property you own or are legally responsible for at the insured location.

Lost income and extra expenses if property damage forces business closure. Covers lost profits, continuing expenses, and costs to resume operations during restoration period.

Mechanical or electrical breakdown of covered equipment including HVAC systems, boilers, refrigeration units, production machinery, and computer equipment.

Why This Fillable ACORD 140 is Required

Commercial property insurance underwriting requires extensive detail beyond what fits on the main application. The property section provides:

  • Risk Assessment Data: Construction type, fire protection, sprinkler systems determine fire risk and rates
  • Valuation Information: Replacement cost, actual cash value, or agreed value basis for claim settlements
  • Occupancy Details: How building is used affects hazard level and premium
  • Protection Class: Fire district, hydrant distance, and response times impact pricing
  • Loss Prevention: Security systems, fire alarms, and safety measures reduce rates
  • Additional Interests: Mortgagees, lienholders, and loss payees must be listed


The ACORD 140 form is required whenever applying for commercial property insurance on buildings, business contents, or business income coverage.

Common Property Insurance Scenarios

Who Needs It: Anyone who owns commercial real estate

  • Office building owners
  • Retail property landlords
  • Warehouse and distribution owners
  • Manufacturing facility owners
  • Multi-tenant property owners
  • Mixed-use development owners

Coverage Needed: Building, loss of rents, liability

Who Needs It: Businesses renting commercial space

  • Retail stores and restaurants
  • Professional offices
  • Medical and dental practices
  • Service businesses
  • Contractors and trades

Coverage Needed: Business personal property, tenant improvements, business income

Who Needs It: Businesses that own the building they operate from

  • Manufacturing companies in owned facilities
  • Medical practices owning their building
  • Restaurants owning their location
  • Auto dealers owning dealership

Coverage Needed: Building, contents, business income, equipment

Who Needs It: High-value or specialized properties

  • Hotels and hospitality
  • Apartment buildings
  • Shopping centers and malls
  • Self-storage facilities
  • Schools and daycare centers

Coverage Needed: Specialized coverages for unique exposures

Specific Triggers for Property Applications

  • New Business Purchase: Buying commercial property requires immediate insurance to close
  • Lease Requirements: Landlord requires tenant to carry property insurance per lease terms
  • Lender Requirements: Mortgage or commercial loan requires property insurance naming lender as mortgagee
  • Business Expansion: Opening new location, warehouse, or facility
  • Major Renovations: Improvements increase property value requiring higher limits
  • Switching Carriers: Changing insurance companies requires new application
  • Policy Renewal: Some carriers require updated property section at renewal

Building coverage protects the physical structure and permanently attached items:

  • Foundation, walls, roof, and floors
  • Permanently installed fixtures (lighting, plumbing, HVAC)
  • Additions and extensions attached to building
  • Permanently installed machinery and equipment
  • Outdoor fixtures (attached signs, canopies)
  • Land (never insurable)
  • Landscaping, trees, shrubs, plants (needs separate coverage)
  • Outdoor signs (requires separate scheduled coverage)
  • Vehicles (covered under auto policy)
  • Property of tenants (tenant’s responsibility)

Contents and movable property owned by or in care of the insured:

  • Furniture, desks, chairs, tables
  • Computers, servers, IT equipment
  • Office equipment (copiers, printers, phones)
  • Machinery and production equipment (not permanently installed)
  • Tools and equipment
  • Tenant improvements and betterments
  • Property of others in your care (with proper coverage)
  • Leased or financed equipment

Protection for financial losses when property damage forces business closure:

  • Net profit you would have earned
  • Continuing normal operating expenses
  • Payroll (if not excluded)
  • Loss during restoration period
  • Extended period of restoration
  • Temporary location rental
  • Equipment rental to continue operations
  • Overtime labor costs
  • Expedited repairs or replacement
  • Temporary utilities setup

How do I determine replacement cost for my building?

Three methods: (1) Professional appraisal ($500-2,000, most accurate), (2) Online replacement cost estimator (free, less accurate), (3) Contractor estimate for rebuilding (moderately accurate). For buildings over $1 million, professional appraisal recommended.

What’s the difference between replacement cost and actual cash value?

Replacement Cost: Cost to rebuild/replace with new materials, no depreciation deduction. $100,000 fire pays $100,000. Actual Cash Value: Replacement cost MINUS depreciation. 20-year-old roof destroyed, replacement cost $50,000, depreciated value maybe $20,000. ACV pays only $20,000.

Do I need separate flood insurance?

YES if in flood zone. Standard commercial property policies EXCLUDE flood. Need separate NFIP (National Flood Insurance Program) or private flood policy. Lenders require flood insurance if in FEMA designated flood zones.

What if I’m a tenant – what should I insure?

Tenants insure: (1) Business Personal Property (your contents), (2) Tenant Improvements & Betterments (upgrades you made to space), (3) Business Income. You do NOT insure the building unless lease makes you responsible.

How does coinsurance work?

Coinsurance requires you insure property to stated percentage of value (typically 80%). If underinsured, you become co-insurer and share in losses. Example: $1M building, 80% coinsurance requires $800,000 insurance. If only $600,000, you’re 25% co-insurer. $100,000 loss pays only $75,000.

Can I insure multiple buildings under one policy?

Yes, using blanket coverage. One combined limit covers all buildings. Advantage: flexibility if one building has large loss. Disadvantage: may require higher total limit than individual building limits.

How long does underwriting take?

Simple properties: 3-7 days. Complex or high-value: 2-3 weeks. Carrier may require: property inspection, loss runs, financials, additional information. Start application 30 days before needed coverage date.

What happens if information changes after binding?

Notify carrier immediately of material changes: major renovations, occupancy changes, new tenants, system upgrades. Changes may affect rates. Failure to notify can void coverage.