WC audits assign uninsured specialists to your policy at the highest rate code.
One missed per-event COI turns their fee into payroll exposure — we've seen it inflate premium 30%+.
GL, E&O, and WC for production and tour managers, creative directors, designers, photographers, and consultants — issued in their name, per engagement. If they're hurt or named in a claim, their policy responds, not a lawsuit against the show, the venue, or you.
Stagehands, riggers, and AV techs work under the venue's control — usually payroll or IATSE. The independent layer — production leadership and creative specialists — runs a real business, and coverage in their own name keeps that independence defensible and the claim off your books.
One missed per-event COI turns their fee into payroll exposure — we've seen it inflate premium 30%+.
Per-event coverage auto-issues with the venue as additional insured before the trucks roll.
Coverage routes per show date — Monday in PA, Tuesday in NY — into the right code automatically.
Per-event activation closes in minutes, covering the swap before the call sheet reprints.
Per-engagement coverage rides with each specialist, so any name on your list is show-ready. No coverage gap means no date goes unstaffed.
What the producer, the venue, and the specialist all need before the run starts — coverage in the contractor's name, issued per engagement.
When you book a specialist, your booking system calls our Assignments API — contractor, role, dates, jurisdiction. We return a per-engagement rate, bind in the contractor's name, and the COI issues before load-in. No payroll cycle, no annual estimate.
Each specialist's premium meters per engagement, in their own name, with per-state routing applied automatically. No annual estimate, no year-end true-up, and these contractors stay off your WC payroll.
GL, E&O, and WC issue in the specialist's own name; the venue and producer are added as additional insured per engagement. So an on-site injury is their claim against their own policy — not a suit against the show.
Every covered specialist carries a my.1099policy.com proof-of-insurance page with a QR code. Venue ops scans it on arrival — coverage confirmed in the contractor's name, no broker in the loop, no certificate chase.
If people get their policies through 1099Policy, we don't review it. We don't even have to look at it. The dates are right, the additional insured is correct — they've crafted the integration to just do all of that work for us.
Which live-events roles genuinely qualify as independent, how per-engagement GL and E&O work, and why coverage in the contractor's name keeps an injury off your books.
Usually the independent production-leadership and creative specialist layer: production managers, tour managers, creative directors, designers, photographers, consultants, and vendors who control how they deliver the work.
Often, yes. Venues, agencies, and brand clients may require proof of workers' comp before a specialist can step onto the show site.
Coverage can bind around the engagement window and certificate requirements: dates, venue, client, role, and additional-insured language.
Yes. The independent specialist remains the named insured, and the venue, producer, agency, or brand client can be added where the contract requires it.
Coverage should follow where the work is performed. 1099Policy stores the record by engagement so audit questions do not land in a spreadsheet scramble.
The independent specialist or their business entity is the named insured. The producer, agency, venue, or brand can be attached as required.
GL, E&O, and WC for production leadership, designers, and creative vendors, per engagement. If they're hurt or named in a claim, their policy responds — not a suit against you. COIs the venue can pull, additional-insured in seconds.

