Frequently Asked Questions

285 frequently asked questions
What insurance do I need before taking on larger clients?

Larger clients bring larger contracts, and typically larger insurance requirements. Enterprise customers have risk management departments that mandate specific coverage terms as conditions of doing business.

Common large-client insurance requirements:

Higher limits: While small businesses might accept $1 million liability limits, large clients often require $5 million or more, including umbrella coverage.

Specific coverages: Professional liability, cyber liability, and other specialized coverages become standard requirements.

Certificate requirements: Detailed certificates of insurance must confirm coverage before contracts execute.

Additional insured status: Large clients require you to add them to your liability policies, extending coverage to protect them from your operations.

Review your target clients’ typical insurance requirements before pursuing their business. The cost of meeting requirements should factor into your pricing and capacity decisions.

What insurance do I need for a company purchasing drones?

Commercial drone operations create exposures that standard business insurance doesn’t address. Before flying drones for business, ensure appropriate coverage is in place.

Drone-specific coverage:

Drone liability: Covers bodily injury and property damage caused by drone operations. General liability may exclude aircraft, including drones.

Hull coverage: Physical damage to the drone itself from crashes, weather, and other perils.

Payload coverage: Protection for cameras, sensors, and other equipment attached to the drone.

Ground equipment: Coverage for controllers, monitors, and other support equipment.

Liability considerations:

General liability exclusions: Most GL policies exclude aircraft liability. Drones may be considered aircraft under these exclusions.

Minimum limits: Many commercial drone insurers offer coverage starting at $1 million liability.

Higher exposure operations: Drones flown over people, near structures, or in other high-risk scenarios may need higher limits.

Hired pilots: If you hire drone operators, ensure coverage extends to their operations.

Regulatory compliance:

FAA requirements: Commercial drone operations require FAA Part 107 certification or waivers. Some customers and insurers require proof of certification.

State and local laws: Additional restrictions may apply in your operating area.

Insurance requirements: Some jurisdictions and property owners require proof of drone liability insurance before allowing operations.

Coverage for drone-related services:

Professional liability: If drone operations are part of professional services (inspections, photography, mapping), E&O coverage should contemplate drone work.

Data liability: Drone imagery may capture information creating privacy or data protection exposure.

Contractual requirements: Clients hiring drone services often require specific insurance coverages and limits.

What insurance do I need for a management buyout?

Management buyouts (MBOs) involve management acquiring ownership from current owners. This transition creates specific insurance considerations for both the acquiring management team and the selling owners.

Pre-buyout insurance analysis:

Due diligence: Management should review the company’s insurance program as part of acquisition planning.

Claims history: Understand pending and potential claims that could affect the business.

Coverage gaps: Identify any uninsured or underinsured exposures.

Policy terms: Review policy conditions, particularly change of control provisions.

Management team protection:

D&O coverage: New ownership structure requires D&O coverage protecting the management team.

Transition period: Coverage during the period between announcement and closing.

Personal guarantees: MBO financing often requires personal guarantees; understand implications for personal coverage.

Key person coverage: Lenders may require key person insurance on acquiring managers.

Seller protection:

Tail coverage: Selling owners need extended reporting period coverage for claims arising after departure.

Indemnification: How purchase agreement indemnification coordinates with insurance.

Representations and warranties: R&W insurance may be appropriate for larger transactions.

Run-off coverage: Coverage for seller liability from pre-sale activities.

Transaction-specific issues:

Change of control: Some policies have provisions triggered by ownership changes. Review and address these.

Financing requirements: Lenders typically have insurance requirements that must be met at closing.

Employee transitions: Understand EPLI implications of any workforce changes accompanying the buyout.

Vendor and customer relationships: Changes may trigger insurance-related contractual provisions.

Work with legal, accounting, and insurance advisors as a coordinated team throughout the MBO process.

What insurance do I need for company vehicles used by employees?

When employees drive company vehicles, several insurance considerations come into play. The coverage structure must address both the vehicles themselves and the risks created by employee operation.

Coverage for company vehicles:

Commercial auto policy: All company-owned vehicles should be listed on your commercial auto policy.

Liability coverage: Protects against claims when company vehicles cause accidents. Limits should reflect your exposure; $1 million or higher is common.

Physical damage: Comprehensive and collision coverage for damage to the vehicles themselves.

Uninsured/underinsured motorist: Covers accidents caused by drivers without adequate insurance.

Medical payments: Covers medical costs for vehicle occupants regardless of fault.

Employee-related considerations:

Driver qualification: Your policy likely requires you to verify employees have valid licenses and acceptable driving records.

MVR checks: Motor vehicle record reviews identify problem drivers before they cause accidents.

Permissive use: Policies typically cover permissive users, but some restrictions may apply.

Personal use: If employees use company vehicles for personal errands, that use should be contemplated in your coverage.

Policy management:

Add and delete vehicles: Notify your agent promptly when you acquire or dispose of vehicles.

Driver lists: Maintain current lists of employees authorized to drive company vehicles.

Accident reporting: Establish clear procedures for reporting accidents immediately.

Usage policies: Written policies on vehicle use, maintenance responsibilities, and prohibited activities.

Employee training:

Safe driving training reduces accidents and can lower premiums. Defensive driving courses, distracted driving awareness, and regular safety reminders all help manage fleet risk.

What insurance do I need for company-owned cell phones and mobile devices?

Company-owned mobile devices represent both property exposure and potential liability. As businesses rely more heavily on smartphones and tablets, proper coverage becomes important.

Property coverage for devices:

Business personal property: Mobile devices are typically covered under your business property policy, but may be subject to limitations.

Off-premises coverage: Devices used outside your business location need coverage that follows them. Standard property policies may limit off-premises coverage.

Inland marine: A scheduled equipment floater or electronics floater provides broader coverage for mobile devices regardless of location.

Deductible considerations: For lower-value devices, deductibles may exceed individual device values, making claims impractical.

Liability considerations:

Distracted driving: Employees using company phones while driving create significant liability exposure. Your commercial auto policy responds to accidents, but prevention is essential.

Data on devices: Lost or stolen devices containing business or customer data create cyber liability exposure.

BYOD vs. company-owned: Bring-your-own-device policies create different insurance considerations than company-owned equipment.

Risk management:

Mobile device management: Software allowing remote wipe of lost devices reduces data breach exposure.

Usage policies: Clear policies prohibiting phone use while driving, and enforcement mechanisms.

Encryption: Device encryption reduces exposure if devices are lost or stolen.

Inventory tracking: Maintain records of all company devices for insurance and security purposes.

Consider both the replacement cost of devices and the data they contain when evaluating coverage needs.

What insurance do I need for electric vehicle fleet conversion?

Converting your fleet to electric vehicles involves insurance considerations that differ from traditional vehicles. As EV adoption grows, insurance practices are evolving, but key differences already exist.

Coverage differences for EVs:

Higher vehicle values: EVs often cost more than comparable conventional vehicles, affecting physical damage coverage and premiums.

Battery coverage: EV batteries are expensive. Ensure physical damage coverage adequately addresses battery replacement costs.

Specialized repair: EV repairs require specialized technicians and facilities, potentially increasing claim costs.

Parts availability: EV parts may have longer lead times, extending rental reimbursement needs.

Fire risk: While rare, EV battery fires have specific characteristics that insurers consider.

Infrastructure considerations:

Charging stations: Workplace charging infrastructure may need property coverage.

Electrical systems: Upgraded electrical systems should be reflected in property coverage.

Equipment breakdown: Charging equipment may need equipment breakdown coverage.

Liability: If others use your charging stations, liability exposure exists.

Potential advantages:

Safety features: EVs often include advanced safety features that may qualify for discounts.

Lower maintenance: Fewer moving parts may mean fewer breakdown-related claims.

Telematics integration: EVs often have built-in telematics that can support usage-based insurance.

Transition considerations:

Mixed fleet: During transition, you’ll have both EV and conventional vehicles requiring appropriate coverage for each.

Training: Driver training for EV operation may affect coverage.

Range planning: If EVs affect operational patterns, discuss implications with your agent.

Lease vs. own: EV leasing arrangements may include some coverage but require review.

Work with an agent familiar with commercial EV operations as you plan your transition.

What insurance do I need for employees who handle money or financial transactions?

Employees who handle cash, process payments, or have access to financial accounts create theft and fraud exposures that require specific coverage beyond standard business insurance.

Coverage for financial exposures:

Employee dishonesty (crime) coverage: This covers theft by employees, including embezzlement, cash theft, and fraudulent transactions. Standard property policies don’t cover employee theft.

Funds transfer fraud: If employees can initiate wire transfers or electronic payments, coverage for fraudulent instructions (often from social engineering) is essential.

ERISA bonds: If these employees also handle benefit plan funds, ERISA requires fidelity bonds equal to at least 10% of plan assets.

Cyber liability: Employees with access to financial systems can be targets for phishing and social engineering. Cyber coverage addresses some of these losses.

Risk management measures:

Separation of duties: Divide financial responsibilities so no single employee controls a transaction from start to finish.

Audits and reconciliation: Regular review catches discrepancies early.

Background checks: Screen employees in financial roles before hiring.

Crime losses can accumulate for years before discovery. Adequate limits and proper controls are both essential.

What insurance do I need when adding a business partner?

Adding a partner changes your business’s ownership structure, risk profile, and insurance needs. Whether it’s an equity partner, investor, or co-owner, insurance considerations should be part of the partnership planning.

Insurance implications of partnership:

Policy updates: Your partner should be added as a named insured on business policies where appropriate.

Liability sharing: Partners share liability for business obligations. Adequate liability coverage protects both partners.

Workers’ compensation: Partner treatment under workers’ comp varies by state and entity type. Partners may need to be included or can elect exclusion.

Key person coverage: If either partner is critical to business success, key person life and disability insurance protects the business.

Partnership-specific coverages:

Buy-sell funding: Life insurance and disability buy-out policies fund partnership buy-sell agreements when a partner dies or becomes disabled.

D&O coverage: If the partnership has formal governance, D&O coverage may be appropriate.

Partnership liability: General partners have unlimited personal liability in general partnerships. Coverage should reflect this exposure.

Employment practices: Adding a partner often correlates with adding employees. EPLI becomes more important.

Partnership agreement considerations:

Insurance requirements: The partnership agreement should specify required coverages and limits.

Premium responsibility: Clarify who pays for what insurance.

Disability provisions: How is a disabled partner’s absence handled, and how is disability insurance coordinated?

Death provisions: Life insurance funding for buy-sell should match agreement terms.

Before finalizing partnership documents, review insurance implications with both your attorney and insurance professional.

What insurance do I need when adding e-commerce to my brick-and-mortar business?

Adding online sales to a traditional retail business creates new exposures that your existing coverage may not address. E-commerce brings cyber risks, expanded geographic reach, and different liability considerations.

New exposures from e-commerce:

Cyber liability: Online transactions mean collecting and storing customer payment data, creating breach exposure that didn’t exist with cash-only or in-person card transactions.

Expanded territory: Selling online may reach customers in states where you’ve never operated, potentially creating new compliance obligations and liability exposure.

Shipping and fulfillment: Products in transit face different risks than products sold in-store. Damage, loss, and delivery disputes become your concern.

Website liability: Your website creates exposure for accessibility claims, copyright issues, and content-related liability.

Coverage to consider:

Cyber insurance: Essential for any business handling online payments or customer data.

Product liability review: Ensure coverage applies to products sold online, not just in-store.

Shipping insurance: Coverage for goods in transit to customers.

Business interruption: Should include coverage for website outages, not just physical damage.

Professional liability: If you provide online advice or services alongside products.

Before launching e-commerce, discuss your plans with your insurance advisor to identify gaps and ensure coverage matches your expanded business model.

What insurance do I need when closing or winding down a business?

Closing a business doesn’t immediately end insurance needs. Proper wind-down includes insurance considerations that protect you from claims arising after closure.

Pre-closure insurance steps:

Maintain coverage: Keep all policies in force through the closure process.

Notify insurers: Inform your insurance carriers of the planned closure.

Claims review: Address any pending or potential claims before closure.

Document everything: Maintain records that may be needed to defend future claims.

Tail coverage needs:

Claims-made policies: D&O, professional liability, EPLI, and cyber policies need extended reporting periods (tail coverage).

Duration: Tail periods typically range from one to six years, though longer options exist.

Cost: Budget for tail coverage as part of closure costs. Premiums can equal one to three times annual premium depending on duration.

Timing: Purchase tail coverage before policies expire; late purchase may not be possible.

Occurrence-based coverage:

General liability: Occurrence policies cover incidents during the policy period regardless of when claims are filed. Specific tail coverage may not be needed.

Completed operations: Coverage for work completed before closure continues under occurrence policies.

Workers’ compensation: Occurrence-based; covers injuries during employment regardless of claim timing.

Post-closure considerations:

Record retention: Keep insurance policies and claims records for years after closure.

Contact information: Maintain ability to contact former insurers.

Personal exposure: Understand any personal liability that survives the business closure.

Tax obligations: Some closures create tax-related exposures with long tails.

Common closure mistakes:

Canceling too early: Canceling coverage before operations truly end.

Forgetting tail coverage: Realizing too late that claims-made policies need extended reporting periods.

Losing records: Not maintaining documentation needed to defend claims or prove coverage.

What insurance do I need when forming a joint venture?

Joint ventures create unique entities with shared ownership and control, requiring insurance arrangements that address the interests of all parties while covering the venture’s operations.

Joint venture insurance considerations:

Separate entity coverage: If the JV is a separate legal entity, it needs its own insurance program.

Shared coverage: Some JV arrangements share coverage from parent companies with appropriate endorsements.

Allocation of costs: The JV agreement should specify how insurance costs are shared.

Coverage requirements: Each party may have minimum coverage requirements the JV must meet.

Key coverages for joint ventures:

General liability: Covering the JV’s operations with all parties named appropriately.

Property insurance: For JV-owned assets, with loss payee provisions reflecting ownership.

Professional liability: If the JV provides professional services.

D&O coverage: Protecting directors and officers appointed by each parent.

Workers’ compensation: For JV employees, which may include seconded employees from parents.

Joint venture agreement provisions:

Insurance requirements: Minimum coverages, limits, and terms required of the JV.

Additional insured status: Parents typically require the JV to add them as additional insureds.

Indemnification: How parties indemnify each other and how insurance supports those obligations.

Claims handling: Procedures for handling claims involving the JV.

Termination: What happens to insurance when the JV ends.

Special considerations:

Conflicting requirements: Parents may have different insurance standards that need reconciliation.

International JVs: Cross-border ventures may need coverage in multiple jurisdictions.

Duration: Ensure coverage matches the JV’s intended duration with provisions for extension or wind-down.

Joint venture insurance arrangements should be formalized in the JV agreement with input from all parties’ insurance advisors.

What insurance do I need when hiring minors?

Employing minors (workers under 18) comes with special legal restrictions and insurance considerations. Child labor laws limit what minors can do, and violating these laws creates both regulatory and insurance problems.

Special considerations for minor employees:

Workers’ compensation: Minors are covered by workers’ compensation like any other employee. However, injuries to minors may receive greater scrutiny from regulators and can result in penalties if work assignments violated child labor laws.

Work hour restrictions: Federal and state laws limit when and how long minors can work, especially during school periods. Injuries that occur during prohibited work hours may create additional liability.

Prohibited occupations: Certain jobs are declared hazardous and prohibited for minors (operating certain equipment, working with explosives, mining, etc.). Injuries in prohibited roles create serious compliance and liability issues.

EPLI: Minors have the same protections against harassment and discrimination as adult employees. Situations involving minors may receive heightened attention.

Parental involvement: Some states require parental consent for employment. Claims involving minors may involve parents or guardians.

Understand both federal and Texas child labor laws before hiring minors. The penalties for violations, and the insurance complications they create, make compliance essential.