Frequently Asked Questions

285 frequently asked questions
What is an ACORD certificate form?

ACORD certificate forms are standardized insurance certificate formats used throughout the insurance industry. Understanding these forms helps you interpret certificates you receive and ensure certificates you issue are properly completed.

What ACORD is:

Industry organization: ACORD (Association for Cooperative Operations Research and Development) creates standard forms for the insurance industry.

Standard formats: ACORD forms are universally recognized, making insurance documentation consistent across carriers and agencies.

Multiple forms: Different ACORD forms serve different purposes.

Common ACORD certificate forms:

ACORD 25: The standard certificate of liability insurance. Shows general liability, auto, umbrella, and workers’ compensation.

ACORD 27: Evidence of property insurance.

ACORD 28: Evidence of commercial property insurance.

ACORD 855: Construction certificate providing additional detail for construction projects.

Reading an ACORD 25:

Producer: The insurance agency issuing the certificate.

Insured: The named insured on the policies.

Insurers: Insurance companies providing coverage.

Coverages: Each coverage type with limits, policy numbers, and dates.

Certificate holder: The party requesting the certificate.

Description of operations: Space for noting projects, additional insured status, and other details.

Certificate limitations:

Informational only: Certificates don’t modify policies or grant coverage rights.

Point in time: Certificates reflect coverage when issued; they don’t guarantee future coverage.

Standard language: Pre-printed language about cancellation notice is not a binding commitment.

Certificate vs. policy:

Certificate summarizes: The certificate is a summary; the policy controls actual coverage.

Verify with agent: If certificate contents matter to you, verify coverage with the issuing agent.

Endorsement review: For important requirements, review actual endorsements, not just certificate notations.

What is an experience modification rate and how can I improve it?

Your experience modification rate (EMR or mod) is a multiplier applied to workers’ compensation premiums based on your claims history. Improving your EMR directly reduces premium costs.

How EMR is calculated:

Comparison basis: Your claims experience is compared to similar businesses in your industry and size.

Three-year period: Calculation uses data from the three policy years prior to the most recent year.

Expected vs. actual: Your actual losses are compared to expected losses for your classification and payroll.

Frequency emphasis: The formula weights claim frequency heavily; many small claims hurt more than one large claim.

Understanding your EMR:

1.0 is average: An EMR of 1.0 means your experience matches the average for similar businesses.

Below 1.0 is good: An EMR of 0.75 means you pay 25% less than average.

Above 1.0 is concerning: An EMR of 1.25 means you pay 25% more than average.

Competitive impact: Many contracts require EMRs below 1.0 for contractor qualification.

Strategies to improve EMR:

Prevent injuries: Safety programs, training, and hazard elimination reduce claim frequency.

Return-to-work programs: Getting injured employees back to productive work reduces claim costs.

Claims management: Active involvement in claims helps control costs.

Accurate classification: Ensure employees are properly classified to avoid inflated expected losses.

Medical management: Prompt, appropriate medical care improves outcomes.

Long-term improvement:

Consistent safety: Sustained safety performance over multiple years improves EMR.

Time heals: Bad years eventually age out of the calculation period.

Trending matters: Improving trends are viewed favorably even if current EMR is elevated.

Documentation: Document safety efforts for underwriting discussions.

EMR improvement requires sustained attention to workplace safety and claims management.

What is an experience modification rate and how does it affect my premiums?

Your experience modification rate (EMR or mod) is a multiplier that adjusts your workers’ compensation premium based on your company’s claims history compared to similar businesses. It’s one of the most powerful tools you have for controlling insurance costs.

How the EMR works:

Baseline of 1.0: An EMR of 1.0 means your claims experience matches the average for your industry and size. You pay the standard premium.

Below 1.0: Fewer or smaller claims than average. An EMR of 0.85 means you pay 15% less than standard rates.

Above 1.0: More or larger claims than average. An EMR of 1.25 means you pay 25% more than standard rates.

Three-year window: Your EMR is calculated from claims data over the previous three policy years, excluding the most recent year.

Investing in safety, return-to-work programs, and proper claims management directly reduces your EMR over time. Many businesses find that safety investments pay for themselves through premium reductions.

What is an insurance appraisal and when can I request one?

Insurance appraisal is a dispute resolution process for disagreements about the value of losses. Most property policies include appraisal provisions.

When appraisal applies:

Value disputes: You and the insurer agree something is covered but disagree on what it’s worth.

Not coverage disputes: Appraisal doesn’t resolve whether something is covered, only its value.

Policy provision: Your policy must include an appraisal clause.

Either party request: Either you or the insurer can invoke appraisal.

How appraisal works:

Demand: Either party makes written demand for appraisal.

Appraiser selection: Each party selects an independent appraiser.

Umpire selection: The appraisers select an umpire to break deadlocks.

Investigation: Appraisers investigate and determine their values.

Agreement or umpire: If appraisers agree, that’s the value. If not, the umpire decides.

Binding result: The appraisal result is typically binding.

Costs:

Your appraiser: You pay your appraiser’s fees.

Umpire: Umpire fees are typically shared.

Other costs: Each party bears their own costs (attorneys, experts, etc.).

Cost-benefit: Consider whether the disputed amount justifies appraisal costs.

When to consider appraisal:

Significant gap: The difference between positions is substantial.

Negotiation failed: Direct negotiation hasn’t resolved the dispute.

Supportable position: You have documentation supporting your valuation.

Coverage is clear: Only the amount, not coverage, is disputed.

Selecting an appraiser:

Qualified expert: Someone with expertise in valuing the type of property at issue.

Independence: Not employed by or affiliated with the insurer.

Experience: Familiarity with insurance appraisal process.

References: Check reputation and past appraisal work.

Appraisal is a tool for resolving value disputes without litigation.

What is an umbrella policy and does my growing business need one?

An umbrella policy provides additional liability coverage above your primary policies’ limits. When a claim exceeds your general liability, auto liability, or employer’s liability limits, the umbrella policy kicks in to cover the excess, potentially saving your business from catastrophic financial loss.

Signs you may need umbrella coverage:

Asset growth: As your business accumulates assets, you become a more attractive target for lawsuits. An umbrella protects what you’ve built.

High-exposure operations: Businesses that interact with the public, use vehicles, or work in litigious industries face outsized claim potential.

Contract requirements: Sophisticated clients and landlords increasingly require umbrella coverage as a condition of doing business.

Umbrella policies are typically sold in $1 million increments and require you to maintain minimum limits on underlying policies. The premium per million of coverage is usually far less than equivalent increases to primary policies, making umbrellas an efficient way to boost protection.

What is bailee coverage and when do I need it?

Bailee coverage protects your business when you have temporary custody of customers’ property. If you damage, lose, or have customer property stolen while it’s in your care, bailee coverage responds.

What is a bailee:

A bailee is someone who temporarily holds another person’s property. Common business examples include:

Repair shops: Auto mechanics, electronics repair, appliance service.

Dry cleaners and laundry: Customer garments in your possession.

Warehouses: Storing customer goods.

Parking facilities: Vehicles left in your care.

Pet services: Animals boarded at your facility.

Event venues: Coat checks, equipment storage.

What bailee coverage provides:

Legal liability: Covers claims when you’re legally responsible for damage to customer property.

Care, custody, and control: Standard general liability excludes property in your care. Bailee coverage fills this gap.

Defense costs: Pays to defend claims that customer property was damaged while you had it.

Coverage considerations:

Valuation limits: Per-item and aggregate limits should match the value of property you typically hold.

Coverage triggers: Some policies cover all damage; others require you to be legally liable.

Customer agreements: Your contracts with customers may limit your liability, affecting coverage needs.

High-value items: Procedures for handling unusually valuable items, potentially including customer’s own insurance requirements.

Risk management:

Documentation: Record the condition of items when received.

Security: Secure storage appropriate to property values.

Customer communication: Clear policies about your responsibility and limitations.

Disclaimers: While not bulletproof, liability limitations help manage exposure.

What is business interruption coverage and when does it apply?

Business interruption insurance replaces income lost when a covered event forces you to suspend operations. Understanding when it applies helps you evaluate coverage needs and file claims appropriately.

What business interruption covers:

Lost income: Net profit you would have earned had operations continued.

Continuing expenses: Fixed costs that continue during shutdown (rent, loan payments, utilities).

Extra expense: Additional costs to minimize shutdown duration or maintain operations.

Payroll: Employee wages during the interruption period (coverage may be limited).

When coverage applies:

Covered property damage: The interruption must result from physical damage to covered property.

Covered peril: The damage must be from a peril covered by your property policy.

Your premises: Typically applies to damage at your location.

Waiting period: Coverage typically begins after a waiting period (often 24-72 hours).

Extended coverage options:

Contingent business interruption: Losses caused by damage to a supplier’s or customer’s property.

Civil authority: Losses when government action denies access to your property.

Ingress/egress: Losses when access to your property is blocked.

Service interruption: Losses from utility service disruptions.

Filing a business interruption claim:

Document the physical damage: The interruption claim depends on an underlying property claim.

Track lost income: Maintain records showing what revenue you would have earned.

Document continuing expenses: Record fixed costs that continued during closure.

Extra expenses: Keep receipts for costs to minimize the interruption.

Mitigation efforts: Document steps taken to reduce losses.

Coverage limitations:

Period of restoration: Coverage ends when repairs should reasonably be complete.

Sublimits: Some coverages have sublimits below the main limit.

Exclusions: Pandemics, utility failures, and other events may be excluded without specific coverage.

Business interruption is often the most significant loss from property damage. Ensure coverage is adequate.

What is business interruption insurance and when do I need it?

Business interruption insurance replaces lost income and covers ongoing expenses when a covered event (typically property damage) forces you to suspend operations. It’s the coverage that keeps you financially whole during the recovery period after a disaster.

When business interruption becomes critical:

Physical location dependency: If your business can’t operate without access to a specific building or equipment, you’re vulnerable to interruption losses.

Fixed costs during closure: Rent, loan payments, insurance premiums, and key employee salaries continue even when revenue stops.

Recovery time reality: Rebuilding after a fire or flood takes months, not days. Business interruption bridges that gap.

Many property policies include some business interruption coverage, but limits may be inadequate for extended closures. A detailed analysis of your actual costs and recovery timeline helps determine appropriate coverage levels.

What is business personal property coverage?

Business personal property (BPP) is the coverage within your property policy that protects movable property you own and use in your business. Understanding what’s included and excluded helps ensure adequate protection.

What BPP typically covers:

Furniture and fixtures: Desks, chairs, shelving, display cases.

Equipment: Computers, printers, machinery, tools.

Inventory: Products you sell or materials you use to make products.

Tenant improvements: Build-outs and modifications to leased space (though sometimes covered separately).

Property of others: Limited coverage for customer or third-party property in your care.

What BPP typically excludes:

Vehicles: Covered under auto insurance, not property.

Money and securities: Require crime coverage.

Land: Not insurable property.

Growing crops: Agricultural insurance covers these.

Standing timber: Specialized coverage needed.

Contraband: Not covered.

Coverage limits:

Blanket vs. scheduled: BPP is typically covered as a single blanket limit for all contents. High-value individual items may be scheduled.

Coinsurance: Many policies have coinsurance clauses requiring you to insure a percentage (often 80%) of actual value or face penalties.

Seasonal fluctuations: If BPP values change seasonally, coverage should reflect peak values.

Valuation:

Replacement cost: Pays to replace with new items of similar kind and quality.

Actual cash value: Replacement cost minus depreciation.

Functional replacement: Pays to replace with items that perform the same function, even if different.

Make sure your BPP limit reflects actual current values. Business growth often outpaces coverage limits.

What is covered under a data breach response?

When a data breach occurs, cyber liability insurance covers the costs of responding. Understanding what ‘breach response’ includes helps you evaluate policy adequacy and know what to expect during an incident.

Typical breach response coverage:

Forensic investigation: Hiring experts to determine how the breach occurred, what data was affected, and whether the threat is contained.

Legal counsel: Attorneys who specialize in breach response, including regulatory compliance and liability analysis.

Notification costs: Printing and mailing notification letters to affected individuals, setting up call centers to handle inquiries.

Credit monitoring: Providing credit monitoring or identity protection services to affected individuals.

Public relations: Crisis communications to manage reputation damage.

Regulatory response: Responding to inquiries from regulators like state attorneys general.

What the process looks like:

Immediate response: Contact your insurer’s breach response hotline. They’ll assign a breach coach to coordinate response.

Investigation: Forensic experts assess the situation while legal counsel guides compliance obligations.

Notification: Once you know what happened, notification to affected individuals and regulators occurs according to applicable laws.

Ongoing management: Call centers handle inquiries; monitoring services activate; PR manages messaging.

Policy coordination:

Review your policy before a breach occurs. Know your insurer’s hotline number, understand notification requirements, and have a basic incident response plan in place.

What is cyber liability insurance and why do I need it?

Cyber liability insurance protects against financial losses from data breaches, cyberattacks, and other technology-related incidents. As businesses increasingly depend on digital systems and handle sensitive data, cyber risk has become a mainstream business concern.

What cyber liability covers:

First-party losses: Your own costs from a cyber incident, including forensic investigation, data recovery, business interruption, and notification expenses.

Third-party liability: Claims from customers, partners, or others whose data was compromised or who suffered harm from the incident.

Regulatory defense: Legal costs to respond to regulatory investigations and potential fines (where insurable).

Ransomware: Many policies cover ransom payments and associated costs, though terms vary significantly.

Why every business needs to consider cyber coverage:

Data everywhere: Even small businesses collect customer emails, payment information, and other sensitive data.

Attack volume: Small businesses are frequent targets because they often have weaker security than large enterprises.

Standard policies exclude cyber: General liability and property policies typically exclude cyber-related losses.

Regulatory requirements: Data breach notification laws apply regardless of business size.

The question isn’t whether you face cyber risk; it’s whether you’re adequately protected against it.

What is directors and officers insurance and when do I need it?

Directors and officers (D&O) insurance protects the personal assets of company directors and officers when they’re sued for decisions made in their corporate roles. As your business structure becomes more formal, D&O coverage becomes increasingly important.

What D&O covers:

Defense costs: Legal fees to defend against claims, which can be substantial even when claims are baseless.

Settlements and judgments: Amounts directors and officers are personally obligated to pay.

Wrongful act allegations: Claims of mismanagement, breach of fiduciary duty, failure to comply with regulations, and similar allegations.

When D&O becomes necessary:

Outside investors: Investors often require D&O coverage to protect themselves as board members.

Formal board structure: Once you have a board of directors beyond founders, D&O protects those serving.

Significant decisions: Major transactions, fundraising, and strategic decisions increase exposure.

Employee claims: Employment-related claims often name individual officers.

Regulatory exposure: Directors and officers face personal liability for regulatory violations.

Who brings D&O claims:

Shareholders: Alleging mismanagement reduced share value.

Employees: Employment claims naming individual decision-makers.

Regulators: Government agencies pursuing individuals for compliance failures.

Creditors: In bankruptcy situations, creditors may pursue directors personally.

Competitors: Antitrust and unfair competition claims.

Even private companies with no outside shareholders face D&O exposure. Any business with formal leadership structure should evaluate D&O coverage.