Burn Through: “I Burned Through the Clear Coat on a Ferrari: Garage Keepers Liability.”

I was polishing the rear quarter panel of a 2025 Ferrari 296 GTB, chasing a scratch. I leaned into the Rupes polisher for just a second too long, and my stomach dropped as the pad turned the color of the paint. I had burned right through the clear coat and base coat, exposing the primer. The repair quote from the authorized body shop is $12,000, and the owner is screaming.

Key Takeaways

  • General Liability Fails You: Standard business insurance covers if you knock over a lamp or a customer slips on soap. It generally excludes damage to the specific part of the car you are working on.
  • You Need Garage Keepers: This is the specific coverage line that protects customer vehicles while they are in your “Care, Custody, and Control.”
  • “Direct Primary” is King: You want “Direct Primary” coverage, which pays out regardless of fault and doesn’t force the customer to file a claim on their own insurance first.
  • The “Workmanship” Exclusion: Even with Garage Keepers, some policies exclude damage caused directly by “faulty work” (the buffing itself). You need to fight for “Broad Form” coverage.

The “Why” (The Trap): The “Care, Custody, or Control” Exclusion

Standard General Liability (GL) policies have a massive hole in them called the “Care, Custody, or Control” (CCC) exclusion.

It essentially says: “We will pay for damage you cause to third-party property, BUT NOT if that property is currently in your hands being worked on.”
Since the Ferrari was under your buffer, it was in your custody. Therefore, a standard GL policy denies the claim, leaving you to pay the $12,000 out of pocket. To fix this, you need a Garage Keepers endorsement.

The Investigation: “I Called Them”

I ran a simulation for a high-end detailer needing coverage for exotics.

1. The Standard GL Carrier (Next / Thimble)

  • The Scenario: Burned paint on a customer car.
  • The Response: Denied. They pointed to the “Professional Services” and “Property Worked Upon” exclusions. They cover the driveway you stand on, not the car you touch.

2. The Auto Specialist (Hagerty / Garage Insurers)

  • The Scenario: Same burn through.
  • The Response: Covered, provided I had Garage Keepers Liability.
  • The Catch: They checked if I had “Faulty Workmanship” coverage. Without it, they might argue the burn was “poor workmanship” rather than an “accident.”

3. Direct Primary vs. Legal Liability

  • The Test: I asked about “Legal Liability” Garage Keepers.
  • The Result: This option only pays if I am legally negligent. While burning paint is negligence, it requires the customer to sue me or prove it. “Direct Primary” just pays the bill to keep the customer happy.

Comparison Table: Garage Keepers Options

Coverage TypePays Out When?Customer InvolvementCost Impact
Legal LiabilityOnly if you are proven negligent (sued)High (They must fight you)Lowest
Direct ExcessAfter customer’s insurance paysHigh (Hits their rates)Medium
Direct PrimaryImmediately (Regardless of fault)Low (We leave them out of it)Highest

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Stop Buffing: Do not try to “fix it” with more compound. You will make it worse.
  2. Call Your Agent: Ask specifically: “Do I have Garage Keepers Direct Primary coverage?” If they say no, upgrade immediately for the future.
  3. Document the Panel: Take high-res photos. In 2026, AI estimators can tell if the clear coat was already failing (delaminating) before you touched it. If it was, you might have a defense.
  4. Offer to Pay the Deductible: If you don’t have the right insurance, offer to pay the customer’s insurance deductible to keep them from suing you for the full amount.

FAQ

Q: Can I just paint the panel myself?
A: On a Ferrari? No. A repaint diminishes value (“Diminished Value Claim”). You need a certified shop to document it properly.

Q: Does my personal auto policy cover this?
A: Absolutely not. Business use is excluded, and “damage to property being transported/serviced” is excluded.

[IMAGE: Diagram showing “General Liability” covering the garage floor vs. “Garage Keepers” covering the vehicle itself.]

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