Frequently Asked Questions

285 frequently asked questions
Should I increase coverage before or after business expansion?

Before, always before. Insurance underwriting looks at your risk profile at the moment of binding coverage. Waiting until after expansion often means temporary coverage gaps, and may result in higher premiums than if you’d addressed coverage proactively.

Why timing matters:

Underwriting appetite: Insurers prefer to grow with established clients rather than come in after a major change when risk is harder to assess.

Coverage continuity: Gaps between your old coverage and new coverage, even brief ones, create periods of uninsured exposure.

Claims timing: If something goes wrong during the transition and you haven’t updated coverage, disputes about whether the old or new policy applies can delay or deny claims.

As soon as you’re seriously planning an expansion (not after you’ve committed), bring your insurance professional into the conversation. Many coverage adjustments can be made contingent on the expansion actually occurring.

Should I insure my business based on revenue or asset value?

Different types of coverage use different rating bases. Understanding which metric applies to which coverage helps you provide accurate information and receive appropriate protection.

Common rating bases:

Revenue-based: General liability premiums typically use gross receipts or revenue as a primary factor. Higher revenue generally means more customer interaction and greater claim potential.

Asset-based: Property insurance bases coverage on the value of buildings, equipment, inventory, and other physical assets you need to protect.

Payroll-based: Workers’ compensation premiums are calculated from payroll, since payroll correlates with employee exposure hours and injury potential.

When completing insurance applications, provide accurate figures for each metric requested. Underestimating to lower premiums creates underinsurance; overestimating wastes money. Your agent can help you develop reasonable projections if your business is growing.

Should I notify my insurer when my business model changes?

Yes. Business model changes represent material alterations to the risk your insurer originally agreed to cover. Failing to disclose significant changes can void coverage or result in denied claims when you need coverage most.

Changes that require notification:

New products or services: Adding offerings outside your original business description changes your liability profile.

New revenue sources: Switching from service to product sales, adding e-commerce, or licensing intellectual property all affect risk.

Operational changes: Shifting from retail to wholesale, changing from B2B to B2C, or altering delivery methods matter to underwriters.

The good news: most routine evolution in business models doesn’t dramatically affect coverage or premiums. The risk is in not disclosing. Open communication with your agent ensures continuous protection through whatever changes your business undertakes.

Should I tell my insurance company about plans that haven’t happened yet?

Disclosure requirements typically apply to current facts rather than future plans. However, proactive communication about planned changes serves your interests even when not strictly required.

The value of early communication:

Coverage planning: Discussing plans in advance gives your agent time to research options and prepare coverage for seamless transition.

Underwriting advantages: Insurers often prefer to hear about changes from you before they happen rather than discovering them at audit or claim time.

Rate predictability: Early discussion of expansion plans helps you budget for coverage costs as part of expansion planning.

You’re not committing to changes by discussing them. But you are building a relationship where your insurance professional serves as a planning partner rather than a reactive administrator.

What are common insurance requirements in commercial leases?

Commercial leases contain insurance provisions that protect landlords from tenant activities. Understanding these requirements before signing helps you negotiate realistic terms and budget for compliance.

Standard lease insurance requirements:

General liability: Typically $1 million per occurrence, $2 million aggregate minimum. Some landlords require higher limits.

Property insurance: Coverage for your business personal property and, in some leases, tenant improvements you make.

Workers’ compensation: Statutory limits if you have employees.

Business interruption: Some leases require coverage for rent continuation if you can’t operate.

Umbrella liability: Many leases require excess liability coverage above primary limits.

Additional insured requirements:

Landlord as additional insured: Standard requirement on liability policies.

Property manager: May also need to be named as additional insured.

Mortgagee: Landlord’s lender may need to be named on property-related coverage.

Waiver of subrogation:

Mutual waiver: Common provision where both landlord and tenant waive subrogation rights against each other.

Policy endorsement needed: Your policy must permit the waiver.

Certificate requirements:

Before occupancy: Proof of insurance required before taking possession.

Annual renewal: Updated certificates required at each policy renewal.

30-day notice: Many leases require your insurer to notify the landlord before cancelling coverage.

Negotiating lease insurance terms:

Match your coverage: Ensure required limits match what you can obtain at reasonable cost.

Blanket provisions: Policies with blanket additional insured and waiver provisions simplify compliance.

Review before signing: Have your insurance agent review lease requirements before you sign.

Reasonable requirements: Push back on unusual or excessive requirements.

What are insurance requirements for professional services contracts?

Professional services contracts for consulting, design, technology, and similar work have specific insurance requirements reflecting the professional liability exposures these services create.

Core professional services requirements:

Professional liability (E&O): Primary coverage requirement, typically $1-5 million depending on contract size and client.

General liability: Standard premises and operations coverage, typically $1-2 million.

Workers’ compensation: Statutory limits if you have employees.

Cyber liability: Increasingly required, especially for technology and data-related services.

Professional liability specifics:

Limit requirements: Often tied to contract value or overall engagement size.

Claims-made coverage: Most professional liability is claims-made; clients may require specific retroactive dates.

Extended reporting: Some contracts require maintaining coverage or tail for years after project completion.

Covered services: Policy must cover the specific services being provided.

Technology and data requirements:

Cyber liability: Coverage for data breaches and cyber incidents.

Technology E&O: Coverage for technology-specific professional services.

Data protection: Coverage addressing client data you handle.

Network security: Coverage for security failures.

Contract-specific provisions:

Indemnification: Professional services contracts typically include significant indemnification obligations.

Limitation of liability: Negotiate limitations; unlimited liability may exceed insurance coverage.

Insurance maintenance: How long coverage must be maintained after completion.

Notice requirements: Obligations to notify client of claims or coverage changes.

Best practices:

Review before signing: Have your agent review insurance requirements before contract execution.

Match coverage to requirements: Ensure your policies satisfy contract terms.

Document compliance: Maintain records of coverage satisfying each contract.

Claims-made management: Track retroactive dates and extended reporting obligations.

What are my obligations when making an insurance claim?

Insurance policies include conditions you must meet to receive claim benefits. Understanding these obligations protects your coverage.

General obligations:

Prompt notice: Report claims as soon as reasonably possible.

Cooperation: Work with the insurer’s investigation and defense efforts.

Honest information: Provide truthful, accurate information about the loss.

Documentation: Provide reasonable documentation supporting your claim.

Examination under oath: Submit to examination if the insurer requests.

Property claim obligations:

Protect property: Take reasonable steps to prevent further damage.

Inventory: Provide detailed inventory of damaged or lost property.

Proof of loss: Submit sworn proof of loss statement if required.

Allow inspection: Let the insurer inspect damaged property.

Keep damaged property: Don’t dispose of damaged items without insurer approval.

Liability claim obligations:

Forward legal documents: Immediately send any lawsuit papers to your insurer.

No admission: Don’t admit liability without insurer consent.

No voluntary payments: Don’t make payments without insurer approval.

Assist in defense: Help prepare your defense, attend depositions and trial.

No settlement: Don’t settle claims without insurer consent.

Workers’ compensation obligations:

Timely reporting: Report injuries within required timeframes.

Cooperation: Cooperate with claims investigation.

Medical authorization: Provide authorized medical treatment.

Return-to-work: Facilitate employee return to appropriate work.

Consequences of non-compliance:

Coverage denial: Serious violations can result in coverage denial.

Reduced payment: Non-cooperation may reduce claim payments.

Policy cancellation: Repeated issues may affect policy renewal.

Fraud charges: Intentional misrepresentation can result in criminal charges.

When in doubt about obligations, ask your agent or read your policy carefully.

What are Side A, B, and C coverage in D&O insurance?

D&O insurance policies typically include three coverage parts, often called Sides A, B, and C. Understanding these components helps you evaluate whether coverage adequately protects directors, officers, and the company.

Side A coverage:

What it covers: Direct protection for individual directors and officers when the company cannot indemnify them.

When it applies: Company is bankrupt, legally prohibited from indemnifying, or refuses to indemnify.

Why it matters: Protects personal assets when corporate protection fails.

No deductible: Side A typically has no deductible; individuals shouldn’t bear costs when the company failed to protect them.

Priority: Most important coverage for individual directors and officers.

Side B coverage:

What it covers: Reimburses the company when it indemnifies directors and officers for covered claims.

When it applies: Company advances defense costs or pays settlements/judgments on behalf of individuals.

Why it matters: Protects corporate treasury from indemnification expenses.

Deductible applies: Company typically pays a retention before coverage applies.

Most common: Most D&O claims are paid under Side B.

Side C coverage:

What it covers: Covers the company itself for securities claims (in public companies) or sometimes broader entity coverage.

When it applies: Claims against the company as an entity, not just individuals.

Public vs. private: Public company policies always include securities claims. Private company policies may include broader entity coverage.

Shared limits: Side C often shares limits with Sides A and B, potentially depleting coverage available for individuals.

Coverage structure considerations:

Dedicated Side A: Additional Side A-only policies ensure individual protection isn’t depleted by entity claims.

Separate limits: Some policies provide separate limits for different sides.

Priority of payments: Understand how the policy allocates limits when multiple claims exist.

What are the insurance implications of converting to a benefit corporation?

Benefit corporations (B-corps) commit to considering stakeholder interests beyond shareholder returns. This structure has specific insurance implications, particularly for D&O coverage.

How B-corp status affects D&O exposure:

Expanded duties: Directors must consider employee, community, and environmental interests, not just shareholders.

Benefit enforcement proceedings: Shareholders can bring legal actions if the company fails to pursue its stated benefit purposes.

New claim categories: Claims that the company failed to achieve social or environmental goals.

Measurement challenges: Assessing benefit achievement is subjective, creating dispute potential.

D&O coverage for B-corps:

Standard D&O: Traditional D&O policies may not clearly cover benefit enforcement proceedings.

B-corp endorsements: Some insurers offer endorsements specifically addressing benefit corporation exposures.

Coverage clarity: Ensure your D&O policy clearly addresses the unique claims B-corps may face.

Wrongful act definitions: Review how wrongful acts are defined and whether benefit-related decisions are included.

Operational considerations:

Reporting requirements: B-corps have reporting obligations whose non-compliance creates exposure.

Stakeholder decisions: Decisions prioritizing non-shareholder interests need D&O protection.

Transparency: Required disclosures create potential liability if inaccurate.

Certification maintenance: If pursuing B-corp certification, maintaining certification status becomes material.

Conversion process:

Board decisions: The decision to convert and setting benefit purposes create D&O exposure.

Shareholder approval: Process for obtaining shareholder approval must be properly handled.

Document updates: Corporate documents must be properly amended.

Coverage transition: Ensure coverage appropriate for B-corp status is in place upon conversion.

B-corps are growing. As the structure matures, insurance products are evolving to address the unique exposures.

What are the insurance requirements for commercial trucks?

Commercial trucks, particularly those operating interstate or carrying certain cargo, face regulatory insurance requirements beyond what smaller commercial vehicles need.

Federal requirements (FMCSA):

Liability minimums: The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration sets minimum liability requirements based on cargo type:
– General freight: $750,000
– Hazardous materials: $1,000,000 to $5,000,000 depending on material type
– Oil transport: $1,000,000

Cargo insurance: For-hire carriers must carry cargo coverage, typically $5,000 per vehicle and $10,000 per occurrence minimum.

Filing requirements: Carriers must file proof of insurance (Form BMC-91 or BMC-34) with FMCSA.

State requirements:

Varies by state: States may have additional requirements for intrastate operations.

Permits and registrations: Commercial truck registrations often require proof of insurance meeting minimum standards.

Weight-based requirements: Heavier trucks may face higher requirements.

Beyond minimums:

Contract requirements: Shippers and brokers often require limits exceeding federal minimums. $1 million liability is common even for general freight.

Adequate protection: Minimums represent legal requirements, not necessarily adequate protection. Serious truck accidents frequently result in claims exceeding minimum limits.

Umbrella coverage: Commercial trucking operations often need umbrella policies providing limits of $2-5 million or more above primary coverage.

Additional trucking coverages:

Physical damage: Coverage for the trucks themselves.

Cargo: Coverage for freight being transported.

Trailer interchange: Coverage when swapping trailers with other carriers.

Bobtail: Coverage when operating without a trailer.

Non-trucking liability: Coverage during non-business use of the truck.

What are the insurance risks of rapid business growth?

Rapid growth is positive but creates insurance vulnerabilities if coverage doesn’t keep pace. The gap between your actual exposure and your coverage widens quickly when growth outpaces policy reviews.

Common rapid-growth insurance risks:

Underinsurance by default: Policies written for last year’s operation may provide inadequate limits, wrong coverage types, or exclusions that didn’t matter until now.

Compliance gaps: Rapid hiring, new locations, and expanded operations each carry compliance obligations that can slip through cracks during fast growth.

Audit surprises: When actual revenue, payroll, or operations significantly exceed projections, year-end audits produce unexpected premium adjustments.

Claims capacity: Fast growth often means stretched management attention, which correlates with increased claims frequency.

Consider quarterly insurance check-ins during rapid growth periods. The few hours invested in staying current on coverage pays dividends in avoided gaps and surprises.

What are the minimum insurance requirements for most business contracts?

While requirements vary by industry and situation, certain minimums appear in most commercial contracts. Understanding these baselines helps you build coverage that qualifies for typical opportunities.

Common minimum requirements:

General liability: $1,000,000 per occurrence, $2,000,000 general aggregate is the most common minimum.

Workers’ compensation: Statutory limits as required by law, plus $1,000,000 employer’s liability.

Commercial auto: $1,000,000 combined single limit when vehicles are used.

Professional liability: $1,000,000 when professional services are provided.

Umbrella/excess: Varies widely, but $2-5 million is common for moderate-risk situations.

Additional standard requirements:

Additional insured: Client named as additional insured on liability policies.

Waiver of subrogation: Waiving recovery rights against the client.

Primary and non-contributory: Your coverage responds first.

Certificate of insurance: Proof of coverage before work begins.

30-day cancellation notice: Though often requested, actual guaranteed notice may require specific endorsements.

Higher-risk situations requiring more:

Large contracts: Higher limits, often $5-10 million total.

Enterprise clients: More demanding requirements than small businesses.

Government contracts: Often exceed commercial standards.

Construction: Frequently requires higher limits and more coverages.

Professional services: May require higher E&O limits matching contract value.

Building baseline coverage:

Meet common minimums: Carry coverage satisfying typical requirements.

Blanket endorsements: Include standard additional insured, waiver, and primary provisions.

Umbrella capacity: Maintain umbrella coverage allowing quick limit increases.

Coverage flexibility: Work with carriers and agents who can adapt coverage quickly.

Below-minimum situations:

Small contracts: Some small clients have minimal or no insurance requirements.

Peer relationships: Relationships between similar-sized businesses may have mutual minimal requirements.

Consumer services: B2C situations may have fewer formal requirements.