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Professional Liability Insurance for Contractors: How does it work?

Professional Liability Insurance for Contractors

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What is Professional Liability Insurance?

Professional Liability Insurance is a type of liability insurance specifically for those providing professional services or advice (e.g., general contractors, engineers, plumbers, etc.) that provides financial protection for your business if you are sued by a dissatisfied client for work errors, undelivered work, misrepresentation, or negligence. Professional Liability Insurance is important for contractors who perform any kind of design or construction management work. Additionally, if any of your subcontractors perform design work, you’ll also want to have Professional Liability Insurance. Even if your subcontractor indemnifies you from liability, the indemnification (also known as a hold harmless clause or provision) may not be enforceable.

Example:

What does Professional Liability Insurance cover?

While your commercial general liability insurance protects your business if your work causes property damage or bodily injury, it does not provide protection for any economic losses your clients may experience due to mistakes in your work. Your clients could still sue you for their economic or financial losses, which is where professional liability insurance steps in.

Professional Liability Insurance provides protection against lawsuits arising from:

Work errors or mistakes

Failure to do what was promised

Undelivered or uncompleted work

Actual or alleged negligence

Misrepresentation

Violation of good faith and fair dealing

Inaccurate advice

With Professional Liability Insurance, you’ll be covered for any judgments against your business for these types of lawsuits, as well as the costs for legal defense against these claims. This insurance covers you, your business, your employees, and independent contractors while they are working for your business.

Example:

What is a Claims-Made Basis?

Professional Liability Insurance is usually written on a claims-made basis.

This means that the active policy when the claim is filed covers the claim, and the events that led to the claim must have happened after the retroactive date of the policy. Therefore, it is important that your policy be carried for a long-term period, as clients may discover errors or omissions in your work long after the work has been completed. Maintaining an active policy insures that there is no possibility of a denied claim in the future.

Example:

Shrinking Limits of Insurance

Because legal and attorneys’ fees can be a large proportion of Professional Liability claims, Professional Liability Insurance has “shrinking” limits of insurance. This means that defense costs come out of policy limits, and as you spend on defense costs, the limits on your policy are reduced, dollar for dollar. For most other types of liability insurance, such as commercial general liability, the costs of defending the lawsuit will be covered outside of policy limits.

What does Professional Liability Insurance not cover?

Professional Liability Insurance covers your business if a dissatisfied client sues you for professional errors or negligence. It does not protect you from the following scenarios:

What are the limits for Professional Liability Insurance?

There are two limits that come with Professional Liability Insurance: occurrence and aggregate. The occurrence limit is the maximum amount the insurer will pay for any one claim made during the life of the policy. The aggregate limit is the maximum amount the insurer will pay in claims for the lifetime of the policy (usually one year). Limits are presented as occurrence/aggregate. For example, a $2M/5M policy will pay up to $2 million for any one claim made during that period and up to $5 million for all claims during the policy’s lifetime.

Policy limits play a large role in the overall cost of Professional Liability Insurance. You may choose a limit based on your risk exposure, or you might opt for coverage with higher limits because of contractual obligations to your client.

How much does Professional Liability Insurance cost?

The cost of Professional Liability Insurance depends on a number of factors, including the type of business you run, your industry, coverage limits, location, and number of employees. While the range of pricing can vary widely, most small business owners can expect to pay annual premiums between $400 and $1,000.

How much Professional Liability Insurance do I need?

For most small businesses, a $1 million per occurrence and $1 million aggregate limit in Professional Liability Insurance is appropriate, but this is highly dependent upon your industry and the risks your business faces.

Final Word

In the course of your business ventures, you should not underestimate your risk of making errors, mistakes, and negligent actions that cause your clients financial losses. Though you may have an impeccable track record, there might come a time when you will make a mistake in your work that causes your clients to file a lawsuit. Professional Liability Insurance serves to complement the commercial general liability policy to protect your contracting firm from lawsuits filed by dissatisfied clients.

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