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Additional Bonds

Auctioneer

Auctioneer bonds guarantee that a licensed auctioneer or auction company will follow state auction law and handle sale proceeds honestly for sellers and buyers.

Additional Bonds

What is a auctioneer bond?

Auctioneer bonds guarantee that a licensed auctioneer or auction company will follow state auction law and handle sale proceeds honestly for sellers and buyers.

Overview

An auctioneer bond is the surety bond a state requires as a condition of an auctioneer or auction company license. It guarantees that the auctioneer will follow state auction law and handle sale proceeds honestly, paying sellers what they are owed and dealing fairly with buyers. A seller, buyer, or the state harmed by a violation can claim against the bond.

State regulators set the required amount, usually modest, so underwriting is straightforward and the bond is quick to issue. Because the bond guarantees honest dealing, the main underwriting factor is the owners' credit.

It is a surety bond that protects sellers, buyers, and the state, not the auctioneer. The auctioneer reimburses the surety for any paid claim under the indemnity agreement.

Who needs this bond

Licensed auctioneers and auction firms in states that condition the auctioneer license on a posted bond.

Typical amount and term

Bond amount is set by each state, commonly 5,000 to 50,000 dollars. Premium runs 1 to 3 percent of the bond amount for well-qualified applicants. Term is usually one to two years.

What this bond costs

Your premium is a small percentage of the bond amount, set by underwriting. The biggest drivers:

  • The state-set bond amount
  • The owners' personal credit
  • Any prior claims history
Scenario Bond amount Estimated premium
Established auctioneer, strong credit $10,000 bond around 1 to 2 percent per year
Average credit $25,000 bond around 2 to 3 percent per year
Higher state amount $50,000 bond rate depends on credit

Figures are illustrative premium ranges, not quotes or statutory amounts. Your rate depends on the bond amount your obligee requires and your underwriting profile.

What you will need

  • State of license and license or application number
  • Owner credit authorization
  • Business name and address

How to apply

  1. Send your state and the required bond amount
  2. Receive a quote, often the same day
  3. Sign and pay, then file the bond with the state

How a surety bond differs from insurance

An auctioneer bond is a surety guarantee that protects sellers, buyers, and the state, not the auctioneer. It is separate from any liability insurance the auction business carries. The bond backstops honest handling of sale proceeds, and the auctioneer repays the surety for any paid claim under the indemnity agreement.

Frequently asked questions

Who needs an auctioneer bond?

Licensed auctioneers and auction firms in states that condition the auctioneer license on a posted bond.

How is the bond amount set?

By each state, and the amounts are usually modest, so the required figure varies from state to state.

How fast can I get the bond?

Because the amounts are small, the bond is usually quick to issue, often the same day for a well-qualified applicant.

What happens on a claim?

The surety pays valid claims up to the bond amount and then seeks reimbursement from the auctioneer under the indemnity agreement.

Reviewed by the Cornerstone Surety bond team. Last reviewed 2026-06-17.