Frequently Asked Questions

285 frequently asked questions
How does my business insurance change when I start offering warranties?

Offering warranties creates contractual obligations that may not be covered by your standard insurance. Understanding the distinction between warranty obligations and insurable claims helps you protect your business appropriately.

Warranty vs. insurance coverage:

Warranty fulfillment: The cost of honoring warranties (repairs, replacements, refunds) is generally a business expense, not an insured loss.

Product liability: Claims that products caused injury or damage beyond the product itself are covered by product liability insurance.

Professional liability: If your services don’t meet warranted standards and cause client losses, E&O coverage may apply.

Coverage considerations for warranty programs:

Extended warranty insurance: If you sell extended warranties or service contracts, you may need specific coverage to back these obligations.

Recall coverage: Product recall insurance can help when warranty issues require removing products from the market.

Business interruption: A wave of warranty claims could disrupt operations; business interruption coverage may help.

Managing warranty risk:

Clear terms: Well-drafted warranty terms limit what you’re obligating yourself to provide.

Reserves: Set aside funds to cover expected warranty claims based on historical data.

Vendor agreements: If warranty issues stem from supplier components, your vendor agreements should address responsibility.

Insurance review: Discuss your warranty program with your insurance agent to identify any coverage gaps.

How does signing a major client contract affect my insurance needs?

Landing a major client is a milestone worth celebrating, but large contracts often come with insurance requirements that exceed what smaller clients demanded. Before signing, review the insurance provisions carefully.

Common requirements from major clients:

Higher liability limits: While small clients might accept $1 million in coverage, enterprise clients often require $2-5 million or more in general liability, sometimes with additional umbrella coverage.

Additional insured status: Large clients typically require being named as additional insured on your policies, extending your coverage to protect them from claims arising from your work.

Professional liability: If you’re providing any advisory, consulting, or professional services, expect requirements for errors and omissions coverage, often with limits matching the contract value.

Cyber liability: Clients increasingly require cyber coverage, especially if you’ll handle their data or connect to their systems.

Certificate requirements: Expect detailed certificate of insurance requirements with specific endorsements and policy language.

Contract insurance provisions to watch:

Indemnification clauses: These obligate you to cover certain losses. Your insurance should align with what you’re agreeing to indemnify.

Coverage maintenance: Contracts may require maintaining coverage for years after project completion.

Waiver of subrogation: Some contracts require your insurer to waive rights to pursue the client for losses.

Review contract insurance requirements with your insurance advisor before signing. Building the cost of required coverage into your pricing ensures the contract remains profitable.

How does social engineering fraud affect my business insurance?

Social engineering fraud, where criminals manipulate employees into transferring funds or revealing sensitive information, has become one of the most common and costly cyber threats. Standard coverage often doesn’t apply, leaving businesses exposed.

Common social engineering scenarios:

CEO fraud: Criminals impersonate executives, instructing employees to wire funds urgently.

Vendor impersonation: Emails appear to come from suppliers, requesting payment to new bank accounts.

IT impersonation: Attackers pose as IT staff, convincing employees to reveal credentials.

Invoice manipulation: Legitimate-looking invoices with fraudulent payment details.

Coverage gaps to watch:

Crime insurance: Traditional crime coverage requires ‘direct’ loss. Social engineering involves the victim voluntarily taking action, which some policies exclude.

Cyber insurance: Many cyber policies focus on data breaches rather than fund transfer fraud.

Funds transfer coverage: Some policies have specific sublimits for funds transfer fraud that may be inadequate.

Ensuring you’re covered:

Social engineering endorsement: Specifically add social engineering coverage to your crime or cyber policy.

Review limits: Social engineering limits are often lower than other crime coverages. Ensure limits match your exposure.

Understand triggers: Some coverage requires you to verify requests through specific procedures.

Prevention matters:

Verification procedures: Require call-back verification for payment changes.

Training: Educate employees about social engineering tactics.

Technical controls: Email authentication, payment approval workflows, and similar controls.

How does workers’ compensation handle pre-existing conditions?

Workers’ compensation covers injuries that arise out of and occur during employment, but pre-existing conditions complicate this determination. You’re generally not responsible for pre-existing conditions themselves, but you may be responsible for work-related aggravation.

How pre-existing conditions affect claims:

Aggravation doctrine: If work aggravates, accelerates, or combines with a pre-existing condition to cause disability, workers’ comp typically covers the resulting claim.

Apportionment: Some states allow insurers to apportion claims between pre-existing and work-related causes, reducing the employer’s share. Texas has complex apportionment rules.

Compensable consequences: If a work injury leads to complications because of a pre-existing condition, those complications are often covered.

Employer considerations:

Hiring decisions: The ADA prohibits refusing to hire based on disability or medical history. Don’t ask about pre-existing conditions during hiring.

Return to work: Accommodating restrictions and facilitating return to work reduces claim costs regardless of pre-existing conditions.

Documentation: Maintain records of job duties and work exposures. Clear documentation helps establish (or refute) the connection between work and injury.

Consult with a workers’ compensation professional when complex claims involving pre-existing conditions arise.

How does workers’ compensation work when employees travel for business?

Workers’ compensation covers employees for work-related injuries regardless of where they occur, but travel adds complexity. The key question is whether the injury happened in the course of employment.

Travel and workers’ comp:

Business trips: Employees traveling for work are generally covered from the time they leave for the trip until they return. This includes travel time, hotel stays, and work activities.

Commuting: Regular commuting to and from work is typically not covered. The ‘going and coming’ rule excludes these trips from workers’ comp.

Exceptions to commuting exclusion: If the employee is traveling directly to a client site, carrying tools or equipment for work, or the travel itself is part of the job (like a delivery driver), coverage may apply.

Personal activities during travel: An injury during a personal errand in the middle of a business trip may not be covered. An injury at the hotel after business hours is a gray area.

Out-of-state travel: Your policy should cover employees working temporarily in other states, but verify this with your agent, especially for extended assignments.

Clear travel policies help both employees and insurers understand expectations.

How is product liability insurance different from general liability?

General liability and product liability are related but address different exposures. Understanding the distinction helps ensure you have appropriate coverage for your actual risks.

Key differences:

General liability (premises/operations): Covers injuries and property damage that occur at your business location or as a result of your ongoing operations. A customer slipping in your store is a premises claim.

Product liability (products/completed operations): Covers injuries and property damage caused by products after they leave your control. A customer injured by a product at home is a product liability claim.

Policy structure: Most commercial general liability policies include both coverages, but they have separate limits and may have different exclusions.

Completed operations: For service businesses, ‘completed operations’ coverage is analogous to product liability. It covers problems that arise after you’ve finished a job.

Businesses that both sell products and provide services need adequate coverage in both areas. Review your policy’s product and completed operations limits separately from your premises/operations limits.

How long do I have to file an insurance claim?

Time limits for filing claims vary by policy type, state law, and specific circumstances. Understanding these limits protects your right to coverage.

Policy notification requirements:

Prompt notice: Most policies require you to notify the insurer ‘promptly’ or ‘as soon as practicable.’

Specific timeframes: Some policies specify exact days (30, 60, 90 days).

Claims-made policies: Claims must be reported during the policy period or extended reporting period.

Occurrence policies: More flexibility on reporting timing, but prompt notice is still required.

State law considerations:

Statute of limitations: States have time limits for filing lawsuits, which indirectly affects claims.

Prejudice requirements: Many states require insurers to show they were harmed by late notice before denying claims.

Regulatory requirements: States may have specific rules about claim handling timing.

Practical timing guidance:

Report immediately: Best practice is to report claims as soon as you’re aware of them.

Potential claims: Report situations that might become claims, even if no claim has been made yet.

Workers’ comp: States have specific reporting deadlines, often 24-72 hours for injuries.

Auto accidents: Report immediately; many policies have strict timing requirements.

Consequences of late reporting:

Coverage denial: Significantly late reporting can result in claim denial.

Reduced payment: Late reporting that causes investigation problems may affect payment.

Defense issues: Late-reported liability claims may have compromised defense.

Regulatory penalties: For workers’ comp, late reporting can result in penalties.

When you discover an unreported claim:

Report immediately: Even late reporting is better than no reporting.

Explain the delay: Document why the claim wasn’t reported earlier.

Gather documentation: Compile available evidence despite the delay.

Seek guidance: Ask your agent or attorney about handling the late report.

Don’t let uncertainty about deadlines delay reporting. When in doubt, report immediately.

How many employees do I need before getting employment practices liability insurance?

You need EPLI from your very first employee. The notion that employment claims only happen at large companies is dangerously wrong. In fact, small businesses are often more vulnerable because they lack formal HR procedures and documentation.

Why small employers face elevated risk:

Less formal processes: Without documented policies, performance reviews, and termination procedures, defending against claims becomes much harder.

Personal relationships: Small team dynamics can make employment disputes more emotionally charged and more likely to escalate.

Limited resources: A single employment claim can consume management attention and legal resources that small businesses can’t spare.

No HR department: Mistakes that a trained HR professional would catch often slip through in small organizations.

The cost of EPLI for small employers is modest compared to the cost of defending even one claim. Most employment attorneys charge $300-500 per hour, and even a straightforward defense can run $50,000 or more.

How much cyber insurance does my business need?

Determining appropriate cyber insurance limits requires evaluating your specific exposures, not applying generic rules. However, several factors help frame the analysis.

Factors affecting coverage needs:

Data volume and sensitivity: More records, or more sensitive data types (medical, financial, children’s data), require higher limits.

Revenue: Business interruption losses correlate with revenue. Higher revenue typically needs higher limits.

Industry: Healthcare, financial services, and retail face elevated cyber exposure due to data types and regulatory environment.

Technology dependence: Businesses that can’t operate without their systems need more business interruption protection.

Contractual requirements: Clients may require specific cyber coverage limits.

Rough sizing considerations:

Notification costs: $150-300 per record for breach notification and response.

Business interruption: How long could you survive without systems, and what would it cost?

Legal defense: Regulatory investigations and lawsuits can cost hundreds of thousands.

Ransomware: Average ransoms have increased dramatically; recovery costs add substantially more.

Starting point guidance:

Small businesses often begin with $1 million limits. Mid-sized businesses may need $2-5 million. Large organizations or those with significant data exposure may need $10 million or more.

Work with an agent experienced in cyber risk to assess your specific situation.

How often should I review my commercial insurance coverage?

Annual reviews are the minimum, but significant business changes warrant immediate attention regardless of your renewal date. Waiting until renewal to address coverage gaps leaves you exposed during exactly the periods when growth creates the most risk.

Triggers for immediate review:

Revenue changes exceeding 20%: Whether up or down, significant revenue shifts affect both your premiums and your coverage adequacy.

New locations or territories: Geographic expansion changes your risk profile immediately.

Major contracts: New client relationships, especially with large entities, often come with insurance requirements you need to address quickly.

Headcount changes: Adding employees affects workers’ compensation, employment practices liability, and overall risk exposure.

Many business owners treat insurance as a set-it-and-forget-it expense. The businesses that avoid coverage disasters are those that treat insurance as an ongoing conversation, not an annual transaction.

How should I budget for insurance as my business grows?

Insurance should be a planned line item in growth projections, not a surprise discovered after expansion decisions are made. Accurate budgeting requires understanding how different growth factors affect different coverages.

Insurance budgeting for growth:

Revenue-linked costs: Expect general liability premiums to increase roughly proportionally with revenue growth.

Employee-linked costs: Workers’ compensation increases with payroll; employment practices liability increases with headcount.

Asset-linked costs: Property premiums increase with real property values and business personal property accumulation.

Step functions: Some costs increase in steps (adding a vehicle, opening a location, entering a new state) rather than gradually.

Budget 3-8% of revenue for insurance, depending on your industry and coverage needs. Knowing this range helps you evaluate whether your current spending is appropriate and anticipate how costs will change with growth.

Is workers’ compensation insurance required in Texas?

Texas is unique among states in that workers’ compensation is not mandatory for most private employers. However, ‘not required’ doesn’t mean ‘not needed.’ The decision to go without coverage exposes your business to significant legal and financial risks.

What opting out means:

Loss of liability protection: Employers who don’t carry workers’ comp lose important legal defenses. Injured employees can sue you directly, and you cannot argue that the employee was at fault or that a coworker caused the injury.

Unlimited exposure: Without the workers’ comp system’s structured benefits, jury awards for workplace injuries can be substantial and unpredictable.

Contract limitations: Many clients, especially larger companies and government entities, require proof of workers’ compensation coverage before awarding contracts.

For most Texas employers, the relatively modest cost of workers’ compensation insurance is far outweighed by the protection it provides. Discuss your specific situation with an insurance professional who understands Texas employment law.