Parking Authorities are autonomous, special purpose, public benefit organizations with a separate legal entity, responsible for parking regulation enforcement within towns and cities.
Monitoring public parking lots and roads, issuing tickets to overtime parking violators, checking illegally parked vehicles and issuing citations for violations are some of the responsibilities of parking enforcement officers, to ensure public safety and smooth flow of traffic.
What is Parking Authorities?
Parking authorities manage on‑street and off‑street parking, impound operations, and enforcement activities for municipalities or special districts. They face exposures from vehicle operations, property damage at lots or structures, and personnel liabilities tied to enforcement duties.
Who needs it
Typical buyers include municipal parking authorities, enforcement agencies, parking operations contractors, and any organization that operates public lots or towing services. For broader facility exposures or multi‑site operations, see the Parking Facilities Insurance storefront at https://completemarkets.com/Parking-Facilities-Insurance/Storefronts/.
What it typically covers
Coverage is layered to address different exposures:
- Commercial general liability for third‑party injury or property damage.
- Commercial auto for fleets and towing vehicles (commercial auto exposure).
- Professional liability for wrongful acts in enforcement, citations, or recordkeeping.
- Workers’ compensation and employers liability for staff injuries on the job.
- Commercial umbrella/excess insurance to extend limits above primary policies.
If you operate a garage or structured parking facility, related products such as Parking Garage Insurance: Essential Coverage for High‑Risk Parking Operations may also apply.
Common exclusions or limitations
Policies commonly exclude intentional acts, willful misconduct, and certain pollution or cyber exposures unless added by endorsement. Mechanical breakdown of equipment or pre‑existing damage to vehicles in custody may be limited, and many programs impose specific deductibles for towing or storage claims.
Factors that influence cost
Underwriting factors include the size of the operation, vehicle miles traveled and tow frequency, claim history, staffing levels, training programs, security and lighting at lots, and whether maintenance or towing is outsourced. Higher towing activity and operations in dense urban areas typically increase premiums.
Risk management—such as documented training for enforcement officers, dash/lot cameras, and written towing procedures—can reduce exposures and lower underwriting costs.
Proof of insurance & compliance
Authorities and contractors usually must maintain certificates of insurance showing required limits and any additional insured endorsements. Proof requirements vary by municipality; confirm specific endorsement language and limits with your risk manager or broker.
How to get a quote
To compare options and find appropriate limits and endorsements for your organization, request a tailored proposal through our quote portal: https://completemarkets.com/quote/. If your operations include managed lots or complex towing programs, our Parking Authority Insurance storefront at https://completemarkets.com/Parking-Authority-Insurance/Storefronts/ has additional guidance.
Risk scenario: a vehicle is damaged during towing from a public lot, generating both a property damage claim and a dispute over procedures—commercial auto and professional liability coverages can respond depending on policy terms.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who typically pays for towing damage claims?
Responsibility depends on the facts of the loss and contract terms; insurance may respond for covered damages while any subrogation or contractual disputes are handled separately.
Does workers’ compensation cover enforcement officers injured on patrol?
In most programs, yes—workers’ comp covers work‑related injuries. Employers liability supplements protect against certain lawsuits by injured employees, subject to policy terms.
Can I add additional insureds such as municipalities or contractors?
Yes, many liability policies allow additional insured endorsements for contract partners or municipalities; confirm required wording with your broker.
Still have questions? Talk to a local insurance expert.