Frequently Asked Questions

285 frequently asked questions
What is motor truck cargo insurance?

Motor truck cargo insurance protects freight you’re transporting from damage or loss. If your business hauls goods for others, cargo insurance is typically required by law and by your customers.

What cargo insurance covers:

Freight damage: Physical damage to cargo from accidents, weather, theft, and other covered perils.

Loading and unloading: Damage that occurs while cargo is being loaded or unloaded.

Theft: Cargo stolen from the truck, whether in transit or parked.

Natural disasters: Weather-related damage to cargo.

Who needs cargo insurance:

For-hire carriers: Trucking companies that transport goods for others are legally required to carry cargo insurance.

Motor carriers: FMCSA regulations require certain cargo liability coverage for interstate carriers.

Freight brokers: While brokers don’t carry cargo, they may need contingent cargo coverage.

Owner-operators: Independent truckers need their own cargo coverage.

Coverage details:

Commodity coverage: Policies may specify which types of cargo are covered. Some commodities require special endorsements.

Limits: Coverage limits should match the maximum value of cargo you transport.

Deductibles: Higher deductibles reduce premiums but increase out-of-pocket costs on claims.

Exclusions: Common exclusions include improper loading, inherent vice (cargo that spoils naturally), and insufficient packaging.

Cargo vs. liability:

Motor truck cargo is separate from auto liability. Liability covers injuries and damage your truck causes to others. Cargo covers the freight you’re hauling. Both are essential for trucking operations.

What is product liability insurance and when do I need it?

Product liability insurance protects your business against claims that a product you manufactured, distributed, or sold caused bodily injury or property damage. If your business puts physical products into customers’ hands, you have product liability exposure.

When product liability becomes necessary:

Manufacturing: If you make products, you’re responsible for defects in design, materials, or manufacturing processes that cause harm.

Distribution and wholesale: Even if you didn’t make the product, distributing or reselling it can make you liable in the chain of commerce.

Retail sales: Retailers can be held liable for selling defective products, even from reputable manufacturers.

Private labeling: If you put your name on a product someone else makes, you may be treated as the manufacturer for liability purposes.

General liability policies include some product liability coverage, but limits and terms may not be adequate for businesses with significant product exposure. Discuss your product lines with an insurance professional to ensure appropriate protection.

What is product recall insurance?

Product recall insurance covers the expenses of removing a defective product from distribution when safety issues emerge. Standard product liability insurance covers injuries caused by products but doesn’t pay for the recall process itself.

What product recall covers:

Notification costs: Communicating with distributors, retailers, and consumers about the recall.

Transportation and storage: Getting recalled products back and warehousing them.

Disposal or repair: Destroying defective products or correcting the defects.

Replacement: Providing replacement products to customers.

Business interruption: Lost profits during the recall period.

Crisis management: Public relations and reputation management.

Third-party liability: Some policies cover liability to retailers and distributors affected by the recall.

When product recall coverage matters:

Consumer products: Products reaching individual consumers create recall exposure if safety issues emerge.

Food and beverage: Contamination risks make recall coverage particularly important.

Children’s products: Safety standards are stringent, and recalls are common.

Automotive components: Parts that affect vehicle safety face significant recall exposure.

Medical devices: FDA-regulated devices may require recalls that cost millions.

Product recall insurance is specialized coverage typically written by a limited number of insurers. If your products could face recall scenarios, discuss coverage options with a knowledgeable agent.

What is return-to-work and how does it affect workers’ compensation costs?

Return-to-work programs help injured employees return to productive work as quickly as medically appropriate. These programs directly reduce workers’ compensation costs and improve outcomes for everyone involved.

How return-to-work reduces costs:

Shorter claim duration: The longer an employee stays away from work, the higher the claim costs. Early return to modified duty shortens disability periods.

Lower indemnity payments: When employees work (even in modified roles), wage replacement benefits decrease or stop entirely.

Better medical outcomes: Employees who remain connected to work generally recover faster than those who stay home isolated.

Experience modification impact: Lower total claim costs translate to lower EMR, reducing premiums for years after the injury.

Program elements:

Modified duty jobs: Identify tasks injured employees can perform within their medical restrictions.

Communication: Stay in contact with injured employees and their medical providers.

Documentation: Keep records of return-to-work offers and employee responses.

Supervisor training: Managers need to understand their role in return-to-work success.

A well-run return-to-work program can reduce workers’ compensation costs by 20-30% over time.

What is run-off coverage and when do I need it?

Run-off coverage provides protection for claims that arise after business activities have ceased. It’s essential when you’re ending operations but still face potential claims from past work.

What run-off coverage addresses:

Latent claims: Claims that emerge long after the work was performed or products were sold.

Long-tail exposures: Industries with claims that may surface years later, such as construction defects or product liability.

Discontinued operations: Activities you no longer perform but that created exposure during the time you did.

Sold businesses: Protecting sellers from claims arising from pre-sale operations.

Run-off vs. tail coverage:

Tail coverage: Extended reporting period on claims-made policies. Covers claims reported after policy ends for incidents during coverage.

Run-off coverage: Broader term that may include occurrence-based protections, specific discontinued operations coverage, or specialized run-off policies.

Often used interchangeably: In practice, people often use these terms interchangeably, though technical differences exist.

When run-off coverage is needed:

Business closure: After ceasing operations entirely.

Division sale: After selling a business unit while retaining other operations.

Product discontinuation: After stopping production of products that could generate claims.

Service line elimination: After discontinuing professional services that created E&O exposure.

Mergers: Covering pre-merger activities of acquired companies.

Run-off coverage options:

Extended reporting endorsement: Adds reporting period to expiring claims-made policy.

Standalone run-off policy: Separate policy specifically for discontinued operations.

Continued coverage: Maintaining existing policies even after activities cease.

Loss portfolio transfer: Transferring liability for past claims to another insurer.

Budget for run-off coverage as part of any transaction or closure involving discontinued activities.

What is subrogation and how does it affect my business?

Subrogation is your insurer’s right to pursue recovery from parties responsible for losses they’ve paid on your behalf. Understanding subrogation helps you navigate claims involving third-party responsibility.

How subrogation works:

Insurer pays your claim: Your insurance company pays for your covered loss.

Rights transfer: You transfer your right to pursue the responsible party to your insurer.

Insurer seeks recovery: Your insurer pursues the negligent party or their insurer for reimbursement.

Recovered funds: Recoveries may be shared with you, particularly for deductible amounts.

Common subrogation situations:

Auto accidents: Your insurer pays your claim, then pursues the at-fault driver’s insurer.

Product defects: Your property insurer pays for damage caused by a defective product, then pursues the manufacturer.

Contractor negligence: Your insurer pays for damage caused by a contractor’s work, then pursues the contractor.

Landlord/tenant: One party’s insurer pursues the other for property damage claims.

Your obligations regarding subrogation:

Preserve rights: Don’t release potentially responsible parties without insurer consent.

Cooperation: Assist your insurer in pursuing recovery.

Documentation: Provide evidence supporting the claim against responsible parties.

No settlements: Don’t settle with third parties for covered losses without insurer involvement.

Waivers of subrogation:

Contract provisions: Some contracts require you to waive your insurer’s subrogation rights.

Policy endorsement: Your policy must permit the waiver.

Effect: Your insurer can’t pursue the party covered by the waiver.

Common situations: Landlord-tenant relationships, construction contracts, and vendor agreements.

Understanding subrogation protects your ability to recover losses and maintains your insurance coverage in good standing.

What is tail coverage and when do I need it?

Tail coverage, formally called an extended reporting period (ERP), provides continued protection for claims arising from past work after a claims-made policy ends. Without it, you could face uncovered claims years after you’ve stopped working.

When tail coverage becomes necessary:

Retiring from practice: When you stop working in your profession, claims can still arise from past work. Tail coverage protects you during retirement.

Closing a business: Business closure doesn’t stop former clients from filing claims. Tail coverage addresses this ongoing exposure.

Changing insurers: If your new insurer won’t honor your retroactive date, you may need tail coverage from the old insurer plus a new policy going forward.

Career changes: Leaving a profession for unrelated work doesn’t eliminate liability for previous professional services.

How tail coverage works:

Single premium: Tail coverage is typically purchased with a single lump-sum premium at the time you end coverage.

Duration: Tail periods vary, often one to five years, though unlimited tail options exist for some professions.

Cost: Expect to pay roughly 100-300% of your annual premium for multi-year tail coverage.

Timing: Many policies require you to purchase tail coverage within a specific window (often 30-60 days) after policy termination.

Planning ahead:

Budget for tail coverage as part of your exit strategy. The cost can be substantial, but the alternative is personal exposure for all past professional work.

What is technology errors and omissions insurance?

Technology E&O is professional liability insurance designed specifically for technology companies and IT service providers. It addresses the unique exposures that arise from providing technology products and services.

What technology E&O covers:

Software failures: Claims arising when your software doesn’t perform as expected or causes client losses.

System implementation problems: Issues with technology deployments, integrations, or migrations.

Data processing errors: Mistakes in handling client data that cause financial harm.

Service failures: Outages, performance problems, or failures to meet service level agreements.

Security failures: Breaches or vulnerabilities in systems you provide or manage.

Intellectual property claims: Allegations that your technology infringes patents, copyrights, or trade secrets.

How it differs from standard professional liability:

Technology-specific terms: Coverage language addresses technology scenarios that general professional liability policies may not contemplate.

Cyber integration: Many technology E&O policies include or can add cyber liability coverage for a comprehensive program.

Third-party products: Coverage may extend to issues with third-party components integrated into your solutions.

If your business provides technology products, software, IT services, web development, or technology consulting, technology E&O should be part of your coverage program.

What is the difference between actual cash value and replacement cost?

Actual cash value (ACV) and replacement cost are two ways policies value property losses. The difference significantly affects claim payments.

Actual cash value:

Definition: The cost to replace property minus depreciation.

Depreciation: Reduction in value due to age, wear, and obsolescence.

Example: A five-year-old computer originally costing $2,000 might have ACV of $400.

Lower premiums: ACV coverage typically costs less than replacement cost.

Out-of-pocket gap: You pay the difference between ACV payment and replacement cost.

Replacement cost:

Definition: The cost to replace property with similar new property.

No depreciation: Age and condition don’t reduce the payment.

Example: That same five-year-old computer would be valued at current replacement cost.

Higher premiums: Replacement cost coverage costs more than ACV.

Full restoration: Allows you to fully replace damaged property.

How replacement cost claims work:

Initial payment: Insurers often initially pay ACV.

Replacement requirement: You must actually replace the property.

Supplemental payment: After replacement, you receive the difference between ACV and replacement cost.

Time limits: Policies may require replacement within a specified period.

Which to choose:

Critical assets: Equipment and property essential to operations should have replacement cost coverage.

Older assets: Significantly depreciated items may be adequately covered at ACV.

Budget considerations: Balance premium savings against potential coverage gaps.

Business impact: Consider whether you could afford the ACV-to-replacement gap out of pocket.

Special valuation methods:

Agreed value: You and the insurer agree on value at policy inception.

Functional replacement: Cost to replace with property performing the same function.

Market value: Sometimes used for buildings, though problematic for insurance purposes.

Understand your policy’s valuation method before a loss occurs.

What is the difference between claims-made and occurrence coverage?

Claims-made and occurrence are two policy structures that determine when coverage applies. Understanding the difference is crucial because it affects how long you’re protected and what happens when you change insurers.

Occurrence coverage:

How it works: Coverage applies if the incident occurred during the policy period, regardless of when the claim is filed.

Example: An incident happens in 2024 while you have a policy. The claim is filed in 2027, after you’ve changed insurers. Your 2024 policy still covers the claim.

Advantages: Permanent protection for incidents during the policy period. No gaps when changing insurers.

Common in: General liability, auto liability, and workers’ compensation.

Claims-made coverage:

How it works: Coverage applies only if both the incident and the claim occur during the policy period (or after the retroactive date and before the policy expires).

Retroactive date: Claims-made policies have a retroactive date. Incidents before that date aren’t covered.

Extended reporting period (tail): When you cancel a claims-made policy, you may need to purchase tail coverage to protect against future claims from past incidents.

Common in: Professional liability, D&O, and cyber liability.

Implications for your business:

If you have claims-made coverage, maintain continuous coverage without gaps in your retroactive date. When changing insurers, ensure the new policy’s retroactive date matches or precedes your original date.

What is the difference between commercial auto and personal auto insurance?

Commercial and personal auto insurance serve fundamentally different purposes, with different coverage structures, limits, and exclusions. Using the wrong type leaves you uninsured for significant exposures.

Key differences:

Who’s covered: Personal auto covers you and family members. Commercial auto covers the business, its employees, and sometimes hired drivers.

Which vehicles: Personal auto covers personally-owned vehicles. Commercial auto covers business-owned vehicles and can extend to personal vehicles used for business.

What activities: Personal policies often exclude commercial use. Commercial policies are designed for business activities.

Liability limits: Personal policies typically max out at $500,000 or less. Commercial policies commonly offer $1 million or higher, with umbrella coverage available.

Additional coverages: Commercial auto offers cargo coverage, hired and non-owned auto, and other business-specific protections.

Why the distinction matters:

Coverage denial: If you have an accident during business use and only carry personal insurance, your claim may be denied entirely.

Underinsurance: Business auto accidents often involve more exposure than personal accidents. A delivery truck accident may involve product damage, business interruption for the other party, and higher medical costs.

Employee exposure: When employees drive, the business faces vicarious liability that personal policies don’t contemplate.

Businesses that use vehicles need commercial auto coverage. The cost difference is modest compared to the protection gap.

What is the difference between first-party and third-party cyber coverage?

Cyber liability policies include both first-party and third-party coverage components. Understanding the distinction helps you evaluate whether a policy adequately addresses your risks.

First-party coverage (your own losses):

Incident response: Costs to investigate what happened, contain the breach, and determine what was affected.

Notification expenses: Costs to notify affected individuals as required by law, including printing, mailing, and call centers.

Credit monitoring: Services offered to affected individuals.

Data restoration: Costs to restore or recreate lost data.

Business interruption: Lost income and extra expenses when systems are down.

Cyber extortion: Ransom payments and negotiation costs.

Crisis management: Public relations and reputation management.

Third-party coverage (claims against you):

Privacy liability: Claims from individuals whose data was compromised.

Network security liability: Claims that your security failures harmed others.

Regulatory defense: Costs to respond to government investigations.

Media liability: Claims arising from your online content.

Most businesses need both components. First-party coverage handles your immediate response costs; third-party coverage handles lawsuits and regulatory actions that may follow.