7.1 Commercial Package Policy (CPP)

Key Takeaways

  • A Commercial Package Policy (CPP) combines two or more coverage parts into one policy; a single coverage part is a monoline policy.
  • Every CPP is assembled from Common Policy Declarations, Common Policy Conditions, Coverage Part declarations, coverage forms, and endorsements.
  • The Common Policy Conditions require 30 days written notice to cancel, except 10 days for nonpayment of premium.
  • The First Named Insured is responsible for premiums, receives cancellation notices, and may act on behalf of all insureds.
  • Packaging coverages typically yields a 5 to 15 percent package modification credit versus buying each line separately.
Last updated: June 2026

What a Commercial Package Policy Is

A Commercial Package Policy (CPP) is a single policy that combines two or more coverage parts under one declarations page and one set of common conditions. The Insurance Services Office (ISO) standardizes its components so an agent can bolt on commercial property, commercial general liability, commercial crime, commercial inland marine, commercial auto, equipment breakdown, or farm coverage as the account requires. A policy containing only one of these lines is a monoline policy, not a package.

The distinction is constantly tested. If an exam stem describes a business that buys only a Building and Personal Property form, that is monoline. Add a CGL coverage part and the same insured now holds a CPP that earns a package modification factor — usually a 5 to 15 percent credit — because the insurer saves on issuance and the spread of risk improves.

How a CPP Is Assembled

Every CPP is built from the same stack of documents. Memorize the order, because questions love to ask which piece performs which job.

ComponentFunctionExample content
Common Policy DeclarationsIdentifies the named insured, mailing address, policy period, and total premiumABC Co., 12/1/26–12/1/27
Common Policy ConditionsSix conditions that apply to ALL coverage partsCancellation, Changes
Coverage Part DeclarationsLine-specific limits, deductibles, locationsBuilding limit $2,000,000
Coverage FormsThe actual insuring agreementsCP 00 10 BPP form
Causes of Loss FormDefines which perils trigger property coverageCP 10 30 Special
EndorsementsAdd, delete, or amend coverageAdditional insured CG 20 10

The Six Common Policy Conditions (IL 00 17)

These conditions, on form IL 00 17, override or supplement each coverage part. Expect at least one question on the numbers inside them.

  1. Cancellation — The insurer must give 30 days written notice; only 10 days is required for nonpayment of premium. The First Named Insured may cancel anytime in writing.
  2. Changes — The policy can be changed only by written endorsement issued by the insurer; oral promises are not binding.
  3. Examination of Your Books and Records — The insurer may audit records during the policy period and up to 3 years after it ends, which supports premium audits on auditable lines.
  4. Inspections and Surveys — Inspections are for underwriting/rating only and do not warrant that conditions are safe or code-compliant.
  5. Premiums — The First Named Insured pays all premiums and receives any return premium.
  6. Transfer of Your Rights and Duties — The policy cannot be transferred without the insurer's written consent, except that on the death of an individual named insured, rights pass to the legal representative.

The First Named Insured

When multiple insureds appear on the declarations, the First Named Insured holds special status: it pays the premium, receives cancellation and nonrenewal notices, may request changes, and acts on behalf of all others. A worked scenario: if a three-entity real-estate group is insured under one CPP and the insurer nonrenews, mailing notice to the First Named Insured satisfies the condition for every entity.

CPP vs. Monoline at a Glance

FeatureCPPMonoline
Coverage partsTwo or moreOne
Premium treatmentPackage credit (5–15%)Full rate
DeclarationsOne common decIndividual
ConditionsIL 00 17 common conditionsLine-specific only
FlexibilityHigh, modularLimited

Coverage Parts You Can Bolt On

The power of the CPP is that almost any commercial line can be attached as a coverage part, each governed by its own coverage form and declarations but sharing the common conditions. Knowing which line solves which exposure is regularly tested.

Coverage partExposure it solvesRepresentative form
Commercial PropertyBuildings, contents, lost incomeCP 00 10, CP 00 30
Commercial General LiabilityThird-party bodily injury / property damageCG 00 01
Commercial CrimeEmployee theft, forgery, computer fraudCrime coverage forms
Commercial Inland MarineProperty in transit, contractors' equipmentFloater forms
Commercial AutoOwned, hired, and non-owned vehiclesBusiness Auto form
Equipment BreakdownBoiler, machinery, electrical arcingEquipment breakdown form
FarmDwellings, barns, livestock, farm liabilityFarm coverage forms

Because each part keeps its own limits and deductibles, an account can carry a $5,000,000 property limit alongside a $1,000,000 liability occurrence limit under a single policy number, single inception date, and single audit cycle.

Why Packaging Wins

From an underwriting standpoint, the CPP reduces adverse selection: an insured cannot cherry-pick only its worst exposure. The insurer therefore rewards the spread of risk with the package modification factor (5 to 15 percent). Administratively, one declarations page, one renewal date, and one set of conditions cut handling costs for both the carrier and the agent, and they reduce coverage gaps because the parts are coordinated rather than written by different companies with mismatched effective dates.

Endorsements and the Order of Precedence

When an endorsement conflicts with a coverage form, the endorsement controls; when a coverage form conflicts with the common conditions, the more specific provision generally governs the line. This hierarchy explains why an additional-insured endorsement (for example CG 20 10 on the liability part) can extend protected status to a landlord without rewriting the base form. Endorsements must always be in writing under the Changes condition — a producer cannot bind a coverage change by phone.

Common Traps

  • A CPP is not the same as a Businessowners Policy (BOP). The CPP is hand-assembled with separate forms and coinsurance; the BOP is a pre-packaged product for smaller accounts (covered in 7.5).
  • The 30/10-day cancellation split is the most-missed number — the shorter window (10 days) applies to nonpayment.
  • Inspections create no safety warranty, so an insurer that inspected and missed a hazard has no added liability.
  • One coverage part alone is monoline; the package credit applies only when two or more parts share the policy.
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Commercial Package Policy Structure
Test Your Knowledge

What is the minimum number of coverage parts required for a policy to qualify as a Commercial Package Policy (CPP)?

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Test Your Knowledge

Under the Common Policy Conditions, how much advance written notice must an insurer give before canceling a CPP for nonpayment of premium?

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B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

Which party is responsible for paying premiums and receives any return premium under a CPP with several named insureds?

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D
Test Your Knowledge

For how long after a CPP expires may the insurer examine the insured's books and records?

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B
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D