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What Is Employee Benefits Liability Insurance?

Employee Benefits Liability Insurance

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What is Employee Benefits Liability Coverage?

Employee Benefits Liability Insurance protects a business against liability caused by errors, omissions, or negligence in employee benefits program administration. It can often be purchased as an endorsement to the commercial general liability policy. From healthcare to pensions to disability and other programs, employee benefits are an important part of the employee’s compensation package. They can help attract and retain talent to your company and typically become an important aspect of an employee’s long-term financial planning and financial health.

At the same time, employee benefits are complex programs that involve many processes, including enrolling employees, maintaining accurate records, and explaining the benefits accurately. If you think about how complicated employee benefit plans can be and how much paperwork or data entry is involved, it’s easy to see how mistakes can be made. A mistake or negligent action, such as not enrolling an employee in a benefit plan, can become a significant financial burden for the employee—who in turn can sue your company for compensation.

Example:

What types of benefits are covered by Employee Benefits Liability Insurance?

Common benefits covered include:

What kinds of mistakes does Employee Benefits Liability Insurance cover?

There is a wide range of errors, omissions, or negligent actions that an HR department can make in administering benefits. For Employee Benefits Liability Insurance, the types of mistakes covered depends on the meaning of “administration.” What types of activities fall under the category of benefits administration? Although the definition will vary among insurers, Employee Benefits Liability Insurance will generally cover administrative mistakes that involve failing to enroll or maintain employees in benefits programs, not providing accurate information about benefits and eligibility, and clerical errors resulting in financial consequences for employees.

Example:

Example:

Example:

What is not covered by Employee Benefits Liability Insurance?

Employee Benefits Liability Insurance is meant to cover some of the gaps left by commercial general liability policies, so it will not duplicate CGL’s coverage. While it covers many types of mistakes made by HR departments in the administration of benefits, there are also certain scenarios and ill-advised actions that are not covered.

Common exclusions for Employee Benefits Liability Insurance include:

Liabilities covered by the commercial general liability policy

Dishonest, fraudulent, criminal, or malicious acts

Insufficient funds

Poor financial advice related to employee benefits

ERISA-related liabilities

Excludes liability imposed on a fiduciary by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974. Under ERISA, the persons who exercise authority over employee benefits plans have a legal responsibility to act in the interest of the plan’s beneficiaries. Breaches of duty under ERISA would be covered by fiduciary liability insurance and not by Employee Benefits Liability Insurance.

Employment-related Practices

Excludes employment-related wrongdoing by the company that an employee may sue for including wrongful termination, discrimination, harassment, and retaliation. These liabilities are covered by employment practices liability insurance.

What are the limits of Employee Benefits Liability Insurance?

For Employee Benefits Liability Insurance, there is typically a per employee limit and an aggregate limit. For example, there might be a $250,000 limit for an employee and a $1 million aggregate limit for lawsuits brought forth by all employees in a year.

Claims-Made Basis and Retroactive Date

Employee Benefits Liability Insurance is generally written on a claims-made basis, which means that coverage is triggered when the claim is made, unless the wrongful act took place before the retroactive date of the policy.

Example:

Employee Benefits Liability Insurance vs. Fiduciary Liability Coverage

Under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), fiduciaries are the persons or organizations that exercise authority or control over the management of benefit plans. Fiduciaries must act in the interest of the plan’s participants and may be held personally liable for any mismanagement of benefit plans. If fiduciaries are sued for wrongdoing related to their role, fiduciary liability insurance will cover their legal defense, investigation costs, court costs, and any settlements or judgments.

Employee Benefits Liability Insurance generally only covers administrative errors and omissions made in the management of benefits. Fiduciary liability insurance policies cover the higher level and discretionary functions of a fiduciary, such as:

Example of fiduciary liability:

Final Word

Employees can file a lawsuit against your business when your HR department makes a mistake in the benefits plan administration that costs employees money. Whether it is failing to enroll employees in company benefits, miscalculating benefits, or misinforming employees about the details of their benefit plans, Employee Benefits Liability Insurance will cover these types of scenarios if your employees sue. With Employee Benefits Liability Insurance, you will have financial protection from any liabilities arising from errors made during the complex task of benefits administration.

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