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Comparison

General Liability vs. Janitorial Bond: What's the Difference?

Clients ask for both constantly without explaining why. Here's the real difference between the two, in plain terms.

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The One-Sentence Version

General liability protects against accidents; a janitorial bond protects against dishonesty. That's the entire distinction, and almost every point of confusion between the two traces back to forgetting this one line.

What General Liability Actually Covers

GL is insurance in the traditional sense โ€” you pay a premium, and if a covered incident happens (a slip-and-fall, property damage from a chemical, a broken item), the insurance company pays the claim. It responds to accidents: things that happen despite everyone acting in good faith.

What a Janitorial Bond Actually Covers

A bond responds to dishonesty, not accidents โ€” specifically, an employee stealing from a client or the business failing to complete work it was contracted to do. It exists because a client wants a guarantee against bad-faith conduct, not against honest mistakes.

Why a Bond Is Not Insurance

This is the part that trips people up. When a bond pays a claim, the surety company that issued it can legally come back to you โ€” the business owner โ€” and require you to reimburse what was paid out. Insurance doesn't work this way; a GL payout isn't something you're expected to pay back. A bond is closer to a guarantee you're personally standing behind than a policy that absorbs the loss on your behalf.

Why Most Commercial Clients Ask for Both

Property managers and facility clients typically want both because they cover completely different failure modes. GL protects them if your work damages their property or hurts someone. A bond protects them if your crew, working unsupervised in their space, steals from them instead. One doesn't substitute for the other, which is why serious commercial contracts almost always specify both rather than treating them as interchangeable โ€” see our commercial cleaner coverage page for the fuller list of what property managers typically require.

Which One to Get First If Budget Is Tight

If you're just starting out and money's tight, GL comes first โ€” it's the coverage almost every client expects by default, and it protects against the more common and more expensive failure mode (an accident, not theft). Add bonding only once a specific contract requires it, at the specific amount that contract specifies. If you're brand new, our guide for new cleaning businesses covers what else to prioritize in those first few months.

How Claims Get Filed Differently

A GL claim typically starts with the client (or their attorney) notifying your carrier directly of an accident or damage โ€” the carrier investigates and pays out according to policy terms, and your role is largely reporting the incident promptly. A bond claim usually starts differently: the client files a claim against the bond itself, the surety company investigates whether the claim is valid, pays the client if so, and then turns to you for reimbursement. The paperwork trail and the party ultimately on the hook for the money are both different, which is worth understanding before a claim ever happens rather than during one.

Do You Need Both From Day One?

Not necessarily. Solo residential cleaners often go a long time with GL only, since bonding rarely comes up until a commercial or government client specifically requires it. The moment you bid on your first contract that lists a bond requirement, that's the trigger โ€” not a calendar date or a revenue milestone. Either way, your certificate of insurance is what actually proves it once you're covered.

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FAQ

Common questions

Can I get a janitorial bond without general liability?+

Technically yes, but it's unusual and most commercial clients expect both together. If a contract requires a bond, assume GL is expected too unless told otherwise.

Does a bond pay out the same way insurance does?+

No. A bond payout is more like an advance the surety company can require you to repay, since it's a guarantee you're standing behind rather than risk the insurer is absorbing.

If my bond pays a claim, do I have to pay it back?+

Generally yes โ€” that's the core difference from insurance. The surety company can seek reimbursement from you after paying out a bond claim.

Which is cheaper, GL or a bond?+

It depends on the amounts involved, but bonds are often priced as a small percentage of the bond amount required, while GL is priced off your revenue and coverage limits โ€” they're not directly comparable dollar for dollar.

Do residential clients ever ask for a bond?+

Occasionally, especially for recurring access to a home, but it's far more common in commercial and government contracts than in residential work.

Get GL, bonding, or both โ€” quoted together.

Tell us what your contract requires and we'll quote the right combination, typically same business day.

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