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Equipment Breakdown & Milk Spoilage for dairy farms

Covers mechanical or electrical breakdown of milking systems, plate coolers, bulk tanks, compressors, and chillers — plus the milk and product spoilage that follows when cooling or processing fails. Standard property excludes both.

Equipment Breakdown & Milk Spoilage — dairy farming

What it covers

  • Milking system and parlor equipment mechanical/electrical failure
  • Bulk tank and plate cooler breakdown
  • Compressor and chiller failure
  • Milk and dairy product spoilage from equipment or power failure
  • Boiler and pressure-vessel failure
  • Cost to repair or replace failed equipment

Who it's for

  • Any dairy that stores milk in a bulk tank (essentially all of them)
  • Operations with significant investment in cooling and milking equipment
  • Creameries and on-farm processors with refrigeration and processing equipment
  • Dairies whose property policy excludes spoilage or equipment breakdown

Why CCA

  • Equipment breakdown paired with a spoilage component — not one or the other
  • Equipment scheduled at replacement cost with fast claim handling
  • Coordinates with business interruption so downtime is covered too
Equipment Breakdown & Milk Spoilage — FAQ

Common questions about equipment breakdown & milk spoilage

Standard property covers external causes — fire, wind, theft. It excludes internal mechanical or electrical failure (compressor burnout, motor failure, electrical fault). Equipment-breakdown coverage fills that gap.

Only with a spoilage component on the equipment-breakdown policy. Without it, a chiller or compressor failure that ruins a full bulk tank is an uncovered loss — and that's a significant dollar amount.

Many equipment-breakdown/spoilage forms include utility-interruption coverage for spoilage caused by an off-premises power outage, subject to a time deductible. We confirm the off-premises power language so a grid outage doesn't become an uncovered loss.

Fast — because on a dairy, downtime is measured in lost milk. We work with carriers that handle breakdown and spoilage claims quickly so you can repair or replace equipment and get back to milking.

Yes — boiler and pressure-vessel coverage is typically part of the equipment-breakdown (boiler & machinery) form, along with the milking, cooling, and processing equipment.

Cost is driven by herd size and value, parlor and equipment value, payroll, feed inventory, and loss history. We quote your actual operation in about 15 minutes — never a ballpark from a generic farm form.

Yes. Contractors Choice Agency is licensed in all 50 states and writes dairy programs nationwide — Wisconsin, California, the Northeast, Pacific Northwest, Southwest, and everywhere dairy operates.

Typically 15 minutes on a call. Larger or higher-value programs may take a day or two to place with the right markets, but we move fast and set expectations up front.

Often yes. We have admitted and E&S markets for dairies declined over manure exposure, prior loss runs, OSHA citations, or other issues. Bring us your situation and we'll find a market.

Usually yes. A coordinated program closes gaps between policies and is typically cheaper than separate policies from separate carriers — and far easier to manage at claim time.

A.M. Best ratings reflect a carrier's financial strength and ability to pay claims. We place coverage with A-rated (and A.M. Best A+ where possible) carriers so the coverage is there when a barn fire, bulk-tank failure, or pollution claim hits.

Yes. Organic herds carry premium stock and feed value; pasture-based and seasonal dairies have different equipment and labor profiles; raw-milk and direct-market operations carry added product-liability exposure. We tailor each program accordingly.

Registered, show, and high-genetic animals are scheduled individually at their real value — not a flat grade-cattle rate. Proper individual scheduling is what ensures a mortality claim pays what the animal was actually worth.

Herd size and breakdown, animal values (especially registered stock), parlor type and milking system, equipment list and values, acreage and feed inventory, payroll and crew size, current coverage, and loss history. The more detail, the more accurate the quote.

It can, with the right endorsement. Hosting tours, petting zoos, or events adds visitor-liability exposure that standard policies under-cover. Tell us if the public visits and we'll add agri-tourism liability.

Yes. Seasonal calving and grazing dairies have different feed, labor, and equipment patterns — and often lower confinement exposures. We reflect how you actually farm in the rating and coverage, not a generic confinement-dairy code.

Livestock claims are paid against records. Incomplete ID, breed, or value records mean delays and reduced payments. We help you document the herd properly up front so a claim is settled quickly and fully.

Yes. If you milk at multiple sites, raise heifers off-site, or lease acreage, we build one coordinated program covering owned, leased, and custom operations with no gaps.

Yes. If you bottle, make cheese, butter, or other products, or run a creamery, we add product liability, equipment breakdown, and property coverage specific to processing — beyond a standard dairy farm policy.

Ready to protect your dairy operation?

Get a 15-minute quote from specialists who understand dairy farming — livestock mortality, parlors, bulk tanks and chillers, and manure exposure.