Independent Contractor: “Booth Renters: Why You Need Your Own Policy.”

I rented a booth at a reputable shop. The owner said, “Don’t worry, the shop is insured.” One of my clients slipped on water I spilled near my station and broke her ankle. She sued the shop and me. The shop’s insurance carrier sent me a letter: “We defend the Shop Owner. You are an independent contractor and not an Insured. You are on your own.”

Key Takeaways

  • You Are a Separate Business: If you are a 1099 Booth Renter, you are a separate legal entity from the shop. The shop’s insurance protects them, not you.
  • The “Additional Insured” Myth: Even if the shop lists you as an “Additional Insured,” that usually only protects the shop from your mistakes. It doesn’t pay your defense lawyer if you are sued directly.
  • Lease Requirements: Most booth rental agreements legally require you to carry your own Professional and General Liability. If you don’t, you are in breach of contract.
  • Portability: Your own policy follows you. If you guest spot or move shops, you stay covered. Shop policies don’t travel.

The “Why” (The Trap): The “Named Insured”

Insurance contracts are specific.

  • Named Insured: The Shop Owner (LLC).
  • Insureds: Employees (W-2).
  • NOT Insured: Independent Contractors (1099).

Unless the shop owner pays extra to specifically add you by name as a “Named Insured” (rare, because it costs money and increases their risk), you are a legal stranger to the policy.

The Investigation: “I Called Them”

I compared the cost of being safe vs. sorry.

1. Relying on Shop Insurance

  • Cost: $0.
  • Risk: 100%. If sued, you pay $10,000+ retainer for a lawyer.
  • Scenario: Shop owner’s insurer sues you (Subrogation) to recover what they paid out for your negligence.

2. Buying Your Own Policy (PPIB/Marine)

  • Cost: ~$650/year.
  • Coverage: $1 Million Liability + Professional Liability.
  • Benefit: You have your own lawyer. You are covered at conventions and guest spots.

Comparison Table: Renter vs. Shop Coverage

Who is Sued?Shop Policy CoversYour Policy Covers
You (The Artist)No (Usually)Yes
The Shop OwnerYesNo
BothOnly the ShopOnly You

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Read Your Contract: Check your Booth Rental Agreement. It almost certainly says “Artist must maintain liability insurance.”
  2. Buy a Policy Today: It takes 10 minutes online. PPIB, Marine Agency, or specialized brokers.
  3. Name the Shop as “Additional Insured”: This makes the shop owner happy and fulfills your lease requirement. It costs nothing to add them.
  4. Save the COI: Keep your Certificate of Insurance on your phone. You need it for every convention you work.

FAQ

Q: Can I share a policy with another renter?
A: No. Policies are per individual/entity.

Q: Does my policy cover my equipment?
A: Liability packages usually have an option to add “Business Personal Property” (

        5k−5k−
      

10k) for your machine and inks. Add it.

[IMAGE: Diagram showing “Shop Policy Umbrella” covering the owner and employees, with the “Booth Renter” standing outside in the rain.]

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