Frequently Asked Questions

285 frequently asked questions
How do I insure leased or rented equipment?

When you lease or rent equipment, the rental agreement typically makes you responsible for damage during the rental period. Understanding your coverage options prevents unexpected costs when equipment is damaged.

Your exposure for leased equipment:

Physical damage responsibility: Most rental agreements require you to return equipment in the same condition or pay for repairs.

Liability: If the equipment causes injury or property damage, you may be liable.

Loss of use: Some agreements require you to pay the rental company’s lost revenue while equipment is being repaired.

Full replacement: If equipment is totaled or stolen, you may owe full replacement cost.

Coverage options:

Your equipment floater: Your inland marine or contractors’ equipment policy may cover rented equipment. Verify this with your agent before assuming coverage applies.

Rental company’s damage waiver: Rental companies offer damage waivers that reduce or eliminate your liability for physical damage. These can be expensive but provide certainty.

Leased equipment endorsement: Add specific coverage for leased equipment to your existing policy.

Short-term rental coverage: For occasional rentals, specific policies or endorsements can address the exposure.

Evaluating options:

Compare costs: Compare the rental company’s waiver price against adding coverage to your own policy.

Read the rental agreement: Understand exactly what you’re responsible for before signing.

Check your policy: Review your current coverage to see what, if anything, applies to rented equipment.

Certificate requirements: Some rental companies require certificates of insurance proving your coverage.

For regular equipment rentals, building coverage into your own policy is often more economical than paying daily damage waivers.

How do I insure outdoor property and signs?

Outdoor property, signage, and exterior assets face exposures that indoor property doesn’t, including weather, vandalism, and vehicle damage. Coverage for these items requires specific attention.

Common outdoor property:

Signs: Building-mounted signs, monument signs, pole signs, and A-frames.

Fencing: Security fencing, decorative fencing, and gates.

Landscaping: Trees, shrubs, and landscaping improvements.

Outdoor equipment: HVAC units, generators, and mechanical equipment located outside.

Fixtures: Parking lot lighting, outdoor furniture, and decorative elements.

Coverage approaches:

Property policy: Standard property policies may include some outdoor property, but often with sublimits.

Scheduled coverage: High-value signs and outdoor property can be individually scheduled.

Inland marine: Signs and some outdoor property may be covered under inland marine policies.

Sign-specific coverage: Specialized sign insurance covers damage, collapse, and electrical failure.

Special considerations:

Wind and hail: Outdoor property is more exposed to wind and hail damage. Check policy terms for these perils.

Flood: Ground-level signs and outdoor equipment may have flood exposure requiring separate flood coverage.

Vehicle damage: Signs near roadways face vehicle collision exposure.

Vandalism: Outdoor property is more vulnerable to vandalism and graffiti.

Electronic signs: LED signs, message boards, and electronic displays may need equipment breakdown coverage for electrical failures.

Landscaping coverage:

Limited coverage: Property policies typically provide very limited landscaping coverage, often $250-$500 per tree or shrub.

Covered perils: Even limited coverage often excludes common landscaping losses like drought, disease, and freezing.

Enhanced coverage: If landscaping investment is significant, discuss enhanced coverage options with your agent.

How do I insure products sold through third-party marketplaces?

Selling through marketplaces like Amazon, eBay, Etsy, or Walmart creates insurance considerations beyond direct-to-consumer sales. Marketplace requirements and liability dynamics affect your coverage needs.

Marketplace insurance requirements:

Mandatory coverage: Major marketplaces increasingly require sellers to carry product liability insurance, typically $1 million per occurrence.

Certificate requirements: You must provide certificates of insurance naming the marketplace as additional insured.

Compliance deadlines: Coverage must be in place before you can list products.

Ongoing verification: Marketplaces may verify coverage periodically.

Liability in marketplace sales:

Your exposure continues: Selling through a marketplace doesn’t eliminate your product liability. You remain liable for defective products.

Marketplace liability: Recent legal developments have increased marketplace platforms’ exposure for third-party seller products, making them more rigorous about seller insurance.

International sellers: Marketplaces often require U.S.-based insurance for selling to U.S. customers.

Getting covered:

Policy structure: Ensure your product liability policy covers sales through third-party marketplaces, not just direct sales.

Named insureds: You may need to add marketplace entities as additional insureds.

Limits adequacy: Marketplace minimums are starting points. Your actual exposure may require higher limits.

Certificate management: Systems to provide certificates to multiple marketplaces and keep them current.

If you sell through multiple marketplaces, work with an agent who understands e-commerce to ensure compliance across all platforms.

How do I insure professional services provided alongside product sales?

Many businesses combine product sales with professional services. This hybrid model creates multiple exposure categories that require coordinated coverage.

Common hybrid business models:

Technology companies: Selling software plus implementation, training, and support services.

Equipment dealers: Selling machinery plus installation, maintenance, and consulting.

Healthcare suppliers: Selling devices plus clinical training and support.

Marketing firms: Creating marketing materials (products) plus strategic consulting (services).

Coverage coordination:

General liability: Covers premises exposure and some product liability.

Product liability: Specifically addresses claims from product defects.

Professional liability: Covers claims arising from professional service errors.

Gap analysis: Ensure no gap exists between where product liability ends and professional liability begins.

Common coordination issues:

Installation: Product defect or installation error? Both coverages may need to respond.

Advice about products: If you recommend products and they fail, is that a product claim or professional service claim?

Training: If your training is inadequate and someone is hurt using your product, multiple coverages interact.

Bundled pricing: How do you allocate revenue between products and services for insurance purposes?

Best practices:

Same insurer: When possible, placing product liability and professional liability with the same insurer reduces coordination problems.

Clear policy language: Ensure both policies clearly address your hybrid operations.

Contract clarity: Customer contracts should distinguish product warranties from service obligations.

Regular review: As your product/service mix evolves, revisit coverage allocation.

How do I insure tools and equipment taken to job sites?

Tools and equipment used at job sites face exposures that standard business property insurance doesn’t adequately cover. Mobile equipment needs coverage designed for its actual use pattern.

Why standard property insurance falls short:

Location restrictions: Property policies cover equipment at scheduled locations. Job sites typically aren’t scheduled.

Off-premises limitations: Limited off-premises coverage (often 10% of property limits) is usually inadequate for significant equipment.

Transit gaps: Equipment being transported may have limited or no coverage.

Theft requirements: Some policies require evidence of forced entry, which may not exist for job site theft.

Appropriate coverage options:

Contractors’ equipment floater: Inland marine coverage specifically designed for mobile equipment. Covers tools and equipment at job sites, in transit, and at your premises.

Tools floater: Similar to equipment floater but focused on hand tools and smaller equipment.

Installation floater: Covers equipment and materials during installation projects.

Scheduled vs. blanket: High-value items can be individually scheduled; smaller tools covered under blanket limits.

Coverage features to evaluate:

Valuation: Replacement cost is generally better than actual cash value for tools you’ll need to replace.

Worldwide coverage: If you work across a wide area or occasionally out of state, ensure coverage territory is adequate.

Theft coverage: Should apply whether tools are in a locked vehicle, locked job box, or secured job site.

Rental equipment: Coverage can extend to equipment you rent, addressing rental agreement requirements.

Inventory management:

Maintain lists: Keep current inventories with descriptions, serial numbers, and values.

Photos: Photograph equipment periodically to document condition and prove ownership.

Secure storage: Locked vehicles, job boxes, and secure job sites reduce theft and support claims.

How do I insure trailers and attachments for commercial vehicles?

Trailers and attachments require coverage beyond what applies to the power unit that pulls them. Properly insuring these assets ensures protection whether they’re attached to trucks or standing separately.

Coverage for trailers:

Commercial auto policy: Trailers can be added to your commercial auto policy. Physical damage coverage protects the trailer itself.

Liability while attached: When attached to a covered vehicle, trailer liability is typically included in the towing vehicle’s coverage.

Detached trailers: When unhitched and parked, trailers may need specific coverage provisions.

Theft coverage: Trailer theft is common. Ensure coverage applies whether attached or detached.

Types of trailer coverage:

Owned trailers: Listed on your policy with specified values.

Non-owned trailers: Coverage can extend to trailers you don’t own but use temporarily.

Interchange agreements: When you swap trailers with other carriers, trailer interchange coverage applies.

Refrigerated trailers: Require coverage for the refrigeration unit and potential spoilage of contents.

Equipment and attachments:

Permanently attached equipment: Cranes, lifts, compressors, and other permanently mounted equipment should be specifically covered.

Removable equipment: Equipment that can be removed may need inland marine coverage rather than auto coverage.

Valuation: Equipment value should be included in vehicle values for physical damage purposes.

Special considerations:

Cargo coverage: Trailer coverage protects the trailer itself. Cargo inside requires separate motor truck cargo insurance.

Multiple locations: If trailers are stored at various locations, ensure coverage applies at all of them.

Loading and unloading: Coverage should extend to damage during loading and unloading operations.

How do I know if my current coverage limits are adequate?

Determining whether your coverage limits are adequate requires evaluating your actual exposure, not just renewing what you’ve always had. Many businesses are significantly underinsured without realizing it until a claim exceeds their limits.

Factors that determine adequate limits:

Asset value: Your total business assets, including equipment, inventory, accounts receivable, and cash, represent what’s at stake in a major loss.

Revenue level: Higher revenue typically correlates with more customer interactions and transactions, increasing potential claim exposure.

Contract requirements: Client contracts often specify minimum coverage limits. Your largest potential clients should inform your limit decisions.

Industry norms: What do similar businesses in your industry typically carry? Being underinsured relative to peers creates competitive disadvantage.

Worst-case scenarios: Consider realistic worst-case claims. A serious injury, major property loss, or significant professional error could each generate claims exceeding $1 million.

Signs your limits may be inadequate:

Growth without review: If your business has grown significantly since you last evaluated limits, coverage may have fallen behind.

New activities: Adding services, locations, or capabilities increases exposure that original limits didn’t contemplate.

Contract rejections: If prospective clients require higher limits than you carry, you’re losing opportunities.

Industry changes: Rising jury verdicts and settlement amounts mean limits adequate five years ago may be insufficient today.

Evaluating limit adequacy:

Work with your agent: They can benchmark your limits against similar businesses and identify gaps.

Consider umbrella coverage: Umbrella policies efficiently extend limits across multiple underlying coverages.

Annual review: Make limit evaluation part of your annual renewal process.

The cost of inadequate limits only becomes apparent when a claim exceeds them. Proactive evaluation prevents that painful discovery.

How do I know if my property is undervalued on my insurance policy?

Property undervaluation is endemic among growing businesses. The building or space that was adequate five years ago may have been improved, expanded, or filled with equipment that far exceeds original estimates, and your policy may still reflect the old numbers.

Warning signs of undervaluation:

Construction cost increases: Building costs have risen dramatically in recent years. A property value set even three years ago may be 20-30% below current replacement cost.

Improvements and additions: HVAC upgrades, security systems, build-outs, and renovations add value that’s often forgotten when policies renew.

Equipment accumulation: The gradual addition of computers, machinery, fixtures, and inventory can double or triple your business personal property value without any single dramatic purchase.

Professional appraisals or detailed equipment inventories aren’t just for large businesses. The hour you spend documenting actual values, and the conversation with your agent that follows, can prevent devastating coverage shortfalls.

How do I maintain continuous compliance across multiple contracts?

Managing insurance compliance across many contracts requires systematic approaches. Without good systems, compliance gaps emerge and create problems.

Compliance tracking fundamentals:

Contract inventory: Maintain a complete list of all contracts with insurance requirements.

Requirement documentation: Record specific requirements for each contract.

Expiration tracking: Monitor when certificates and coverage expire.

Compliance status: Track whether each requirement is currently met.

Exception management: Document any negotiated exceptions or modifications.

System options:

Spreadsheets: Workable for smaller numbers of contracts.

Database solutions: More robust tracking as volume increases.

Contract management systems: Insurance tracking as part of broader contract management.

Insurance-specific systems: Dedicated certificate and compliance tracking tools.

Process elements:

New contract review: Review insurance requirements before signing.

Implementation: Ensure coverage meets requirements before work begins.

Ongoing monitoring: Track compliance throughout contract term.

Renewal management: Update coverage and certificates at renewals.

Change management: Address coverage changes affecting compliance.

Common compliance failures:

Expired certificates: Letting certificates lapse without renewal.

Limit shortfalls: Coverage falling below required minimums.

Missing endorsements: Required endorsements not added to policies.

Policy gaps: Periods without required coverage.

Documentation gaps: Unable to prove compliance when questioned.

Agent partnership:

Shared visibility: Keep your agent informed of contract requirements.

Proactive service: Work with agents who track requirements and alert you.

Efficient documentation: Agents who can quickly issue compliant certificates.

Requirements expertise: Agents who understand common contract requirements.

Internal responsibilities:

Ownership: Someone should be responsible for insurance compliance.

Communication: Contract signers should communicate insurance requirements to compliance owners.

Escalation: Clear process for addressing compliance problems.

Audit readiness: Maintain documentation for internal and external audits.

How do I maintain continuous coverage during business transition periods?

Coverage gaps during transitions (relocations, ownership changes, operational shifts) can void otherwise valid claims. Maintaining continuous protection requires deliberate planning, not assumptions that everything transfers automatically.

Preventing transition coverage gaps:

Overlap periods: When changing policies, locations, or coverage structures, build in overlap to ensure no gap exists between old and new protection.

Communicate changes early: Give your insurance professional weeks, not days, to arrange coverage changes. Rush arrangements create errors.

Confirm effective dates: Written confirmation of exactly when old coverage ends and new coverage begins prevents misunderstandings.

Tail coverage: Some professional liability and claims-made policies require extended reporting period coverage (tail coverage) when policies change.

The cost of brief coverage gaps is asymmetric: the premium savings are tiny while the exposure is potentially catastrophic. Never economize on continuous coverage.

How do I maintain continuous coverage through multiple business changes?

Businesses evolve through multiple changes over time: expansions, restructurings, acquisitions, divestitures, and more. Maintaining continuous coverage through these changes protects against gaps that could leave you exposed.

Why continuity matters:

Claims-made coverage: Gaps in claims-made coverage can leave past activities uninsured.

Retroactive dates: New policies may not cover pre-existing activities if continuity is broken.

Prior acts: Continuous coverage preserves protection for historical activities.

Defense position: Insurers may dispute coverage for claims during gap periods.

Maintaining continuity through changes:

Early planning: Begin insurance planning before changes occur, not after.

Overlap not gaps: When changing insurers or policies, overlap slightly rather than leaving gaps.

Documentation: Keep records of all coverage, including policies for entities that no longer exist.

Retroactive date preservation: When changing insurers, negotiate retroactive dates matching your original coverage inception.

Common continuity risks:

Entity changes: New entities may not automatically inherit coverage from predecessors.

Insurer changes: Switching carriers can reset retroactive dates if not handled properly.

Premium non-payment: Letting coverage lapse for non-payment breaks continuity.

Policy cancellation: Premature cancellation during transitions creates gaps.

Undisclosed changes: Failing to notify insurers of material changes may void coverage.

Best practices for continuity:

Single agent relationship: Long-term relationships with one agent help maintain continuity.

Policy archives: Keep copies of all policies indefinitely.

Certificate tracking: Maintain records of coverage for every entity and time period.

Claims history: Preserve complete claims history.

Annual review: Regular coverage reviews catch potential continuity issues.

Treat coverage continuity as an ongoing priority, not just a concern during obvious transitions.

How do I manage the emotional stress of a major business loss?

Major losses create emotional stress alongside business challenges. Acknowledging and addressing this stress helps you navigate recovery effectively.

Common emotional responses:

Shock: Initial disbelief and difficulty processing what happened.

Anxiety: Worry about the business’s future and your ability to recover.

Anger: Frustration at the situation, the cause, or the recovery process.

Grief: Mourning lost property, routines, or sense of security.

Overwhelm: Feeling unable to manage everything requiring attention.

Managing your response:

Acknowledge feelings: Recognize that emotional responses are normal.

Prioritize: Focus on most critical issues; everything doesn’t need immediate attention.

Delegate: Share responsibilities with trusted employees or advisors.

Take breaks: Step away periodically to maintain perspective.

Seek support: Talk to family, friends, peers, or professionals.

Supporting employees:

Communication: Keep employees informed about the situation and recovery plans.

Acknowledge concerns: Recognize that employees have their own anxieties.

Resources: Provide access to employee assistance programs if available.

Routine: Restore normal routines as quickly as possible.

Involvement: Include employees in recovery efforts.

Practical stress management:

Organization: Create systems to track recovery tasks.

Documentation: Write things down to reduce mental load.

Professional help: Use your agent, accountant, and attorney for their expertise.

One step at a time: Break recovery into manageable pieces.

Self-care: Maintain basic self-care even during intense recovery periods.

Long-term perspective:

Businesses recover: Most businesses survive significant losses.

Lessons learned: Use the experience to strengthen the business.

Resilience building: Recovery experience builds capacity for future challenges.

Community support: Customers, vendors, and community often rally to help.

Your wellbeing matters for business recovery. Take care of yourself while taking care of business.