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Personal Insurance Exclusions For Delivery Drivers In Kentucky

Why Kentucky personal auto policies deny every gig delivery claim, and what coverage actually pays.

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Why Your Personal Auto Policy Denies Every Delivery Claim

Every standard Kentucky personal auto policy contains a carve‑out called the livery, business, or commercial use exclusion. The second a driver logs into DoorDash, Uber Eats, Instacart, Grubhub, Amazon Flex, Shipt, or any other delivery platform, that carve‑out kicks in. If a crash happens while they are logged in, the personal carrier denies the claim. The coverage the driver has been paying premiums for does not apply.

This is not small print. This exclusion is on virtually every personal auto policy written in Kentucky, including policies from carriers tracked by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. The exclusion language is almost word‑for‑word identical across carriers because it is drawn from an Insurance Services Office (ISO) standard form. It has been held up in courts around the country.

Standard Exclusion Language You Will See

Pull any Kentucky personal auto policy and look for language like this under “Exclusions”:

“We do not provide coverage for any vehicle while it is being used to carry persons or property for a fee. This exclusion does not apply to shared‑expense car pools.”

“Coverage is not provided while the insured vehicle is logged onto a transportation network company or delivery network platform.”

Things That Can Trigger Exclusions

Carriers do not need a delivery to be in progress to deny a claim. They only need one of the following to be true at the moment of the crash:

  1. App status. The driver was logged into a delivery app, even in “available” or “on‑duty” mode with no active order.
  2. Delivery in progress. The driver accepted a delivery or was transporting a package, food, or groceries for a fee.
  3. Commercial branding. The driver was operating a clearly marked delivery vehicle (Amazon Flex, FedEx contractor, Instacart bag visible) whether or not the app was technically on.

Kentucky Rideshare & Delivery Endorsements Exist, But Drivers Rarely Buy Them

Kentucky carriers now sell optional endorsements to plug the gap. They have different names, but they all do roughly the same thing: restore coverage during app‑on time that the standard policy excludes. The catch is that most delivery drivers either do not know these endorsements exist or cannot afford the premium bump. According to the Kentucky Department of Insurance, personal auto premiums in Kentucky already run above the national average, and adding delivery coverage can push a policy out of reach.

Common Kentucky carrier options include rideshare endorsements from major national insurers, “transportation network driver” add‑ons, and standalone commercial auto policies. Without one of these, a personal auto claim for a delivery crash is almost always denied.

What Happens After A Denial

When the at‑fault driver’s personal carrier denies the claim, you are not out of options. This is where the three‑window delivery company policy becomes critical, and where your own uninsured and underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage may do the heavy lifting. A careful attorney works through the coverage stack in order:

  1. Confirm the denial in writing from the personal auto carrier and identify the exclusion they are relying on.
  2. Identify which delivery window the driver was in (App Off, App On Waiting, or Delivery Active) – covered in full detail on our delivery driver insurance gaps page.
  3. Tender the claim to the delivery platform’s commercial carrier (Progressive, Aon, Zurich, and others, depending on the company).
  4. Stack your own UM/UIM coverage under KRS 304.39‑320 if the responsible coverage is insufficient to pay for the full scope of medical bills, lost earnings, future care, and other damages.
  5. Preserve the PIP claim (up to $10,000 per person) under KRS 304.39‑110 to cover immediate medical bills and wage loss while liability is sorted out.

Kentucky Legal Points That Drive Recovery

  • No‑fault statute. Kentucky’s Motor Vehicle Reparations Act (KRS 304.39) sets the PIP and UM/UIM framework.
  • Statute of limitations. Two years from the date of the last basic reparations benefit (PIP) payment under KRS 304.39‑230. Miss it and the claim is gone.
  • Comparative fault. KRS 411.182 lets you recover even if you are partly at fault, reduced by your percentage.
  • Bad faith. A carrier that denies coverage without a legitimate basis can be pursued under Kentucky’s Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act.

Stacking Your Own UM/UIM: The Most Powerful Recovery Tool

When the at‑fault driver’s personal policy denies and the delivery platform’s coverage is limited (especially in Window 2, which can be as low as 50/100/25 for most apps), your own UM/UIM policy is what moves the case. Kentucky allows stacking of UM/UIM in many circumstances, meaning multiple policies covering resident relatives in your household may apply. A thorough review of every policy in the household, at work, and through any trade group is part of every case we work.

This is the step insurance companies hope you skip. Most injured Kentuckians have no idea they can stack coverage, or that a delivery crash opens the door to their own insurer. We do. Our team works up the policy stack aggressively on every gig delivery crash.

Frequently Asked Questions

If the delivery driver had insurance, why would it not cover me?
Because the driver’s personal auto policy almost certainly contains a livery or commercial‑use exclusion. The moment they log into a delivery app, the personal carrier steps away from the claim. Coverage usually falls to the delivery company’s commercial policy, but only during specific windows, and often with lower limits than you expect.
What is the commercial use exclusion?
A standard provision in personal auto policies that removes coverage when the vehicle is used to carry persons or property for a fee. It is drawn from an Insurance Services Office (ISO) template and appears in nearly every Kentucky personal auto policy. Couriers, gig delivery drivers, and rideshare drivers are all affected.
Does it matter if the driver was between deliveries?
Yes, but not in the way most people think. Being “between deliveries” still counts as logged into the app, which means the personal policy still excludes the crash. Coverage may instead come from the delivery platform’s contingent policy at reduced limits. See our insurance gaps page for the full three‑window breakdown.
Can a Kentucky delivery driver avoid the exclusion with an endorsement?
Yes. Rideshare and delivery‑driver endorsements are available in Kentucky from major carriers. They restore coverage during app‑on time. The problem is cost: the endorsement is optional, runs an extra premium, and is rarely purchased by part‑time gig drivers.
If the personal policy denies, whose insurance pays?
Usually the delivery platform’s commercial carrier (for example Progressive Commercial or Aon), subject to the coverage window and policy limits in effect. If those are not enough, your own uninsured or underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) policy may cover the gap under KRS 304.39‑320.
Do I have to sue the driver personally?
Usually not. Most recoveries are paid by insurance: the delivery platform’s commercial policy, your UM/UIM policy, and PIP. A lawsuit is a tool to force carriers to pay what they owe when coverage exists and they refuse. The objective is to get the client made whole, not to chase a gig driver’s personal assets.

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