Child Labor: “Helping My Kid Start a Detailing Biz: Insurance for Minors.”

My 15-year-old son wants to start detailing neighbors’ cars. He’s borrowing my polisher. I’m proud, but then I thought: “What if he burns through the paint on a neighbor’s Tesla?” Can a minor even get insurance?

Key Takeaways

  • Minors Can’t Sign Contracts: An insurance policy is a contract. A 15-year-old cannot legally sign it. The policy must be in a parent’s name or an LLC formed by the parent.
  • Adding to Your Policy: If you have a detailing business, you can add him as an Employee or Volunteer. He is then covered under your existing Liability and Garage Keepers.
  • The “Hobby” Trap: If you rely on your Homeowners insurance, you are exposed. Homeowners insurance specifically excludes “Business Pursuits.” If he takes money for the job, it’s a business, and Homeowners denies the claim.
  • LLC Strategy: Form an LLC with you as the manager and him as a member (or employee). Buy the insurance in the LLC’s name.

The “Why” (The Trap): “Business Pursuits”

Your Homeowners policy covers your kid if he throws a baseball through a window.
It does NOT cover him if he buffers through a hood while charging $50.
That is a Commercial Activity.
Without a Commercial Liability policy, you (the parent) are personally liable for his mistakes because you are his legal guardian.

The Investigation: “I Called Them”

I asked how to insure a teen entrepreneur.

1. Standalone Policy (Next/Thimble)

  • Verdict: You (Parent) must sign up. List the business as “John Doe dba Kid Detailing.”
  • Cost: ~$50/month.
  • Coverage: Covers him completely.

2. Adding to Parent’s Business Policy

  • Verdict: Easy. Just add him to the payroll/driver list.
  • Cost: Small increase (~$200/yr).

3. Relying on “Luck”

  • Verdict: If he damages a $100k car, you get sued. Not worth the risk.

Comparison Table: Kid’s Biz Insurance

OptionLegalCoverageCost
Homeowners PolicyNoDenied$0
Parent’s LLCYesCoveredLow
New Policy (Parent Signed)YesCoveredMedium

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Form the Entity: Even a simple Sole Proprietorship in your name (“Parent Name dba Kid’s Detailing”) works.
  2. Buy a Basic Policy: Get a cheap General Liability + Garage Keepers policy. Apps like Thimble are perfect for this (pause when school starts).
  3. Supervise the Polishing: Insurance covers negligence, but as a parent, you should ensure he is trained before letting him touch paint.
  4. Limit the Scope: Maybe start him with “Wash and Vac” only (low risk) before moving to Paint Correction (high risk).

FAQ

Q: Can he drive the customer’s car?
A: NO. He is likely under 18 and driving a customer car for business purposes violates most licensing laws and insurance policies (“underage driver” exclusion). He washes where it’s parked.

Q: Does he need a license?
A: A business license? Probably not for a kid, but check your city.

[IMAGE: Graphic showing “Parent” holding the “Insurance Umbrella” over the “Teen Detailer”.]

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