Frequently Asked Questions
What is a business owner’s policy and when do I need one?
A business owner’s policy (BOP) bundles property and general liability coverage into a single package, typically at a lower premium than purchasing each component separately. It’s designed for small to medium businesses with straightforward coverage needs.
A BOP makes sense when:
You have physical assets: Office equipment, inventory, furniture, and fixtures need protection from fire, theft, and other perils.
You interact with the public: Customer-facing operations create liability exposure that a BOP’s general liability component addresses.
You want simplicity: Managing one policy with one renewal date and one premium payment simplifies administration.
However, a BOP has limitations:
Coverage caps: Standard BOPs have maximum limits that may not suit larger operations.
Exclusions: Professional liability, auto, workers’ compensation, and certain specialized coverages require separate policies.
Eligibility: Some industries and business sizes don’t qualify for BOP packaging.
An insurance professional can help you determine whether a BOP meets your needs or whether a customized program makes more sense for your situation.
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 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 the difference between replacement cost and actual cash value coverage?
This distinction determines whether your insurance claim pays enough to actually replace damaged property or merely reimburses its depreciated value. For growing businesses with modern equipment, the difference can be substantial.
Understanding the two approaches:
Replacement cost: Pays to replace damaged property with new property of like kind and quality, without deduction for depreciation. A five-year-old computer destroyed by fire is replaced with a current equivalent.
Actual cash value (ACV): Pays replacement cost minus depreciation. That five-year-old computer might be valued at 30% of its original cost, regardless of what a replacement costs today.
Replacement cost coverage typically costs more but provides far better protection for operational continuity. When a fire or theft disrupts your business, you need to resume operations quickly, and that requires functional equipment, not depreciation settlements.
What questions should I ask my insurance agent before expanding?
The conversation before expansion is worth far more than the scramble after. A proactive discussion with your insurance professional helps you expand confidently, knowing coverage will be in place when needed.
Essential questions to cover:
What’s covered now? Before discussing changes, confirm exactly what your current policies do and don’t cover.
What will change? Walk through your expansion plans in detail. New locations, new states, new employees, new equipment, new services: each affects coverage.
What will it cost? Get estimates before committing to expansion so insurance costs are part of your financial projections.
What’s the timeline? Some coverage changes take time. Know how far in advance you need to act.
What are the alternatives? There may be multiple ways to structure coverage for your expanded operation. Understanding options helps you make informed decisions.
Your insurance agent should be a planning partner, not just a policy vendor. The best agents want these conversations early and often.
What should I know about insurance before franchising or licensing my business?
Franchising or licensing introduces insurance complexities that single-location operators never encounter. You’re now responsible for risks created by operations you don’t directly control, and franchise agreements create specific insurance obligations.
Franchise insurance considerations:
Franchisor requirements: Franchise agreements typically mandate minimum coverage levels, policy forms, and named insured status for the franchisor.
Vicarious liability: Even with insurance requirements in place, franchisors can face liability for franchisee conduct. Your own coverage should anticipate this exposure.
Multiple location complications: Each franchise location may require separate proof of coverage, and requirements may vary by jurisdiction.
Before expanding through franchising, have both your franchise attorney and your insurance professional review the insurance provisions of your franchise agreement. These provisions affect your ongoing costs and risk exposure significantly.
What’s the difference between claims-made and occurrence policies?
Understanding the difference between claims-made and occurrence policies is fundamental to ensuring you have continuous protection. The distinction affects when coverage applies and what happens when you change insurers.
Occurrence policies:
Coverage trigger: Covers incidents that occur during the policy period, regardless of when the claim is filed.
Permanent protection: Once an occurrence happens during your policy period, you’re covered for claims arising from it even years later.
Common examples: Most general liability and commercial auto policies are occurrence-based.
Advantage: No gaps when changing insurers; past incidents remain covered by the policy in force when they occurred.
Claims-made policies:
Coverage trigger: Covers claims made during the policy period, regardless of when the incident occurred (subject to retroactive date).
Retroactive date: Only covers incidents occurring after this date, which is typically when you first purchased claims-made coverage.
Common examples: Professional liability, directors and officers, employment practices liability, and cyber policies are typically claims-made.
Continuous coverage essential: Gaps in coverage can leave you exposed for past work.
When changing claims-made insurers:
Maintain retroactive date: Ensure your new policy’s retroactive date matches your original coverage start, not the new policy start.
Tail coverage: If you’re canceling without replacement, purchase an extended reporting period (tail) to cover future claims from past work.
Understanding your policy type prevents costly coverage gaps when your insurance needs change.
When should I consider switching from personal to commercial auto insurance?
The moment a personally owned vehicle is used regularly for business purposes, you’ve potentially voided your personal auto coverage for those activities. Personal policies typically exclude commercial use, creating liability exposure during exactly the activities that need coverage most.
Triggers for commercial auto consideration:
Regular business travel: If employees routinely use personal vehicles for work (deliveries, client visits, errands), you need to address the coverage gap.
Titled business vehicles: Any vehicle titled in the company name requires commercial coverage, period.
Transporting goods or equipment: Moving business property or inventory creates cargo exposures personal policies don’t address.
The non-owned and hired auto endorsement on a commercial policy covers liability when employees use personal vehicles for business. For company-owned vehicles, a dedicated commercial auto policy provides appropriate protection for business use.
When should I increase my general liability policy limits?
Policy limits that seemed adequate when you started may become dangerously low as your business grows. The question isn’t just about your current revenue; it’s about your exposure to claims that could exceed your coverage.
Key factors that signal it’s time to increase limits:
Revenue growth: Higher revenues typically correlate with more customer interactions, more transactions, and statistically more opportunities for claims.
Contract requirements: Landlords, clients, and partners increasingly require proof of substantial coverage. A $1 million limit that satisfied everyone five years ago may not meet today’s contractual thresholds.
Asset accumulation: As your business builds equity, equipment, and reputation, you have more to protect, and more that a plaintiff’s attorney might pursue.
The cost difference between $1 million and $2 million in general liability coverage is often surprisingly modest. A conversation with your insurance advisor can help you weigh the premium increase against the protection gained.
