Running a small business comes with risk. A customer could get injured, property could be damaged, a worker could get hurt, a lawsuit could happen, or a cyberattack could shut down operations. Business insurance helps protect your company from financial loss.
The type of insurance you need depends on your industry, location, employees, property, vehicles, and services.
One common policy is general liability insurance. This can protect your business if someone claims bodily injury, property damage, or advertising injury. For example, if a customer slips and falls at your office, general liability may help cover legal costs.
Professional liability insurance, also called errors and omissions insurance, is important for service-based businesses. It may protect you if a client claims your advice, mistake, or failure to deliver caused financial harm.
Workers’ compensation insurance is often required if you have employees. It helps cover medical care and lost wages if an employee gets injured on the job.
Commercial property insurance protects buildings, equipment, inventory, furniture, and business property from covered damage such as fire, theft, or storms.
Cyber liability insurance is becoming more important for small businesses. If your company stores customer data, accepts online payments, or uses email, cyber coverage may help after a data breach, ransomware attack, or fraud incident.
Some businesses also need commercial auto insurance, product liability insurance, business interruption insurance, or a business owner’s policy.
A business owner’s policy, often called a BOP, combines general liability and commercial property coverage into one package. It may be a cost-effective option for small businesses.
Before buying coverage, list your biggest risks. Do you have customers visiting your location? Do you give professional advice? Do you store sensitive data? Do employees drive for work? Do you own expensive equipment?
The right business insurance can protect your cash flow, reputation, and future. Without coverage, one lawsuit or disaster could put your company at risk.