Before you upgrade your work truck, get an insurance quote first
I've been running an F350 dually with a flat deck for hauling my trailer and compost equipment. It's got a boost leak and it's starting to feel like death by a thousand cuts — every time I fix one thing, something else comes up. So I started looking at upgrading to something heavier duty, an F550 or a medium duty truck (chev C4500) that could actually handle the payload without being pushed to its limits.
Before I got too far down the road, I called two insurance brokers to get commercial quotes on both options.
The number shocked me. Because I'd be considered a new driver of that class of vehicle, insurance came in at $3,500–$5,600 per year depending on the broker — compared to about $700/year on my F350 dually. Same story whether it was the F550 or the medium duty Chevy. The insurers don't care that I only put about 1,000–1,500 km a year on my work truck, just short local drive. Bigger vehicle, bigger liability, end of conversation.
That math changes everything. I'm still looking for the right truck — something reliable that doesn't cost near-new money for something old and beat up — but I'm glad I got the insurance reality check before I committed to anything.
If you're thinking about upgrading your equipment vehicle, call a broker before you fall in love with a listing.