Glossary
Named Insured
Named Insured may appear in trucking insurance quotes, certificates, policy forms, contracts, filings, or claim conversations.
Plain-English summary
In plain English, it refers to the person or business named on the policy as the insured party. The exact effect depends on policy language, the operation, and any applicable regulator or contract requirement.
Where it shows up
Named Insured can appear during broker onboarding, renewal review, a certificate request, a vehicle change, or a claim file depending on the operation.
Who sees this in certificate requests
- Owner-operators reading a quote
- New authorities preparing documents
- Small fleets reviewing certificates or claims
Why wording matters
- Where the term appears
- How to discuss it with an agent
- Why the definition can affect coverage
Where COI wording gets overread
What the wording does not prove
- A standalone guarantee of coverage
- A substitute for policy wording
- Legal advice about a contract
Certificate request mistakes
- Treating informal shorthand as policy language
- Assuming the same word means the same thing in every policy
Documents to compare
- Policy declarations
- Certificates
- Endorsements
- Contracts or official filing notices when relevant
Questions before issuing wording
- Where is this term defined in the policy?
- Does an endorsement change the meaning?
- Does a regulator or contract use the term differently?
Sources
- Auto Insurance Regulator National Association of Insurance Commissioners — checked 2026-05-19
- Commercial Auto Insurance Educational Insurance Information Institute — checked 2026-05-19
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