If you organize a track day, race weekend, car show, or motorcycle event, youโre not just planning a fun day โ youโre managing contracts, venues, volunteers, participants, and public safety.
The tricky part: many organizers assume a standard business policy (or a generic event policy) will cover them. Then a venue asks for specific liability wording, a permit requires additional insureds, or an incident happens and everyone realizes the risk doesnโt fit inside a one-size-fits-all policy.
Below are four Canada-wide, real-world style scenarios (cars + motorcycles) that show where motorsports event insurance in Canada matters โ and what a broker should actually do to help.

Track day and motorsports event participants during a Canadian racing event.
Motorsport events involve unique risks that standard event insurance policies may not fully address. Racetracks, municipalities, sponsors, and event venues often require:
Whether you organize a motorcycle track day, grassroots racing event, or charity car show, proper motorsports event insurance coverage can help protect your event, your reputation, and your season.
A spring motorcycle track day with riders, instructors, and volunteers.
Two weeks before the event, the facility updates its contract requirements: higher liability limits, specific certificate wording, and multiple additional insureds.
A general event policy may not satisfy racetrack insurance requirements, especially when timelines are tight.
Reviewing facility contracts, confirming insurance wording requirements, and ensuring the certificate of insurance matches exactly what the venue requires.
The organizer avoids cancellation, meets the facility deadline, and keeps the event moving forward.
A weekend motorcycle show with vendor booths, demo rides, and overnight trailer storage.
Overnight, a trailer is broken into and motorcycles are damaged during an attempted theft.
Temporary storage and overnight staging areas can create confusion about responsibility between organizers, vendors, and owners.
Providing practical guidance, helping organize documentation, and supporting the event organizer through the process.
The event continues with minimal disruption while protecting vendor relationships and the event reputation.
A grassroots car lapping series hosting monthly track nights.
A vehicle leaves the track and damages barriers and trackside equipment.
Facilities often want one accountable party, and assumptions about โthe driver payingโ can become complicated quickly.
Aligning insurance responsibilities with facility agreements and helping organizers navigate the documentation process properly.
The event organizer protects the venue relationship and avoids major disruptions to the season schedule.
A charity car show and parade route involving volunteers, municipal permits, sponsors, and public spectators.
A slow-speed incident causes property damage and bystander complaints.
Municipal permits and sponsors often require specific liability wording that generic event policies may not provide.
Ensuring insurance coverage aligns with permit requirements and helping organizers respond appropriately after an incident.
The organizer protects sponsor relationships, community trust, and the long-term future of the event.
To speed up the quoting process and ensure proper coverage, organizers should prepare:
Yes. Waivers help reduce risk but do not replace liability insurance or satisfy venue requirements.
Motorsports events involve unique exposures including track activity, higher speeds, participant risk, and facility contracts that standard policies may not fully address.
In many cases, yes. Proper COI wording is often one of the most important requirements for motorsports venues and municipalities.
No. AIM Insurance can help support qualifying motorsports events across Canada.
Planning a track day, race weekend, motorcycle event, or car show anywhere in Canada?
Call 1-877-AIM-4TMW to review your venue contract, liability requirements, and event insurance options.
Contact AIM Insurance to get started.
