Foundations · Lesson 3 of 9
What is a surety bond
How surety bonds work, who pays whom when, and why states make them a license condition.
About 3 minutes to read
Builds on
What you'll learn
- The three parties to a surety bond and what each one owes
- Why the bond exists from the state's point of view
- What "claims" really mean and what they can cost
Three parties, not two
A Surety bondA three-party guarantee. The state requires the bond, the business buys it from a surety, and the state can claim against it if the business harms the public. is not insurance for the business. It is a three-party guarantee. The state is the obligee. The licensed business is the principal. The surety company underwrites the bond and stands behind it. If the business harms the public in a way the bond covers, the state or an affected party can make a claim, the surety pays, and the surety then comes after the business to be reimbursed.
Why the state requires one
From the state's point of view a bond does two things at once. It puts real money behind the license, so a bad operator has skin in the game. It also gives the public a way to be made whole when something goes wrong without the state itself having to write a check.
This is also why a Surety bondA three-party guarantee. The state requires the bond, the business buys it from a surety, and the state can claim against it if the business harms the public. is different from a Fidelity bondDifferent animal than a surety bond. Protects a business against employee theft or fraud. Not usually a licensing requirement. or E&O insuranceErrors and omissions insurance. Protects a business when a professional service it delivered is alleged to have caused a client loss. insurance, which protect the business itself, not the public.
What "the amount" actually means
Every state bond requirement comes with a face amount. That is the maximum the surety will pay against valid claims. The premium the business pays for the bond is a small percentage of the face amount, set by underwriting based on the principal's financials and credit.
The face amount and the premium are different numbers, and conflating them is one of the most common mistakes operators make when sizing the cost of a license.
To see how that math plays out for your situation, the estimator below turns bond type, target states, and a credit range into a typical annual premium.
Surety bond premiums vary based on bond amount, credit history, and state requirements. Select your bond type, target states, and credit range to see estimated annual premiums based on published requirements and typical market rates.
This information is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, regulatory, or compliance advice. Requirements vary and change frequently. Consult with a qualified professional before making business decisions.
How we'd handle it
The bond piece, sizing the right face amount per state, filing the surety paperwork, and tracking renewals so a lapsed bond never cancels a license, is the kind of thing that's hard to track yourself across many states. Cornerstone Licensing runs the surety side so the bonds stay current and your team stays focused on the business.
FAQ
Questions operators ask about this lesson
Is the bond like insurance?
No. Insurance pays the policyholder. A surety bond pays a third party harmed by the principal, and the surety expects the principal to reimburse it.
Can the same bond cover multiple states?
Almost never. Bonds are written to a specific state's statutory form. A multi-state operator typically holds multiple bonds.