Business & Commercial Insurance
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Business & Commercial Insurance Information
General Liability and Business Owners Policies (BOPs)
Unfortunately for every business owner, the chances of getting sued have dramatically increased in the last decade. General Liability insurance can prevent a legal suit from turning into a financial disaster by providing financial protection in case your business is ever sued or held legally responsible for some injury or damage.
General Liability pays losses arising from real or alleged bodily injury, property damage, or personal injury on your business premises or arising from your operations.
Broad Range of General Liability Protection
- Bodily Injury, including the cost of care, the loss of services, and the restitution for any death that results from injury
- Property Damage coverage for the physical damage to property of others or the loss of use of that property
- Products-Completed Operations provides liability protection (damages and legal expenses up to your policy's limit) if an injury ever resulted from something your company made or service your company provided
- Products Liability is a more specialized product liability insurance that protects your company against lawsuits from product-related injury or accidents
- Contractual Liability extends to any liability you may assume by entering into a variety of contracts
- Other coverage includes: Reasonable Use of Force; Borrowed Equipment; Liquor Liability; Non-Owned Vehicles (such as aircraft and watercraft); Fire, Lightning or Explosion Damage; Water Damage Liability Protection; Legal Defense Costs; Medical Payments; Personal Injury; Advertising Injury; and specialized liability protection for specific business types
Business Owner's Policy (BOP) (*includes General Liability Protection and more)
- Property Coverage covers your Building and Business Personal Property for replacement cost
- Accounts Receivable
- Business Income and Extra Expense Covers income that is lost due to suspended operations caused by damage at the described premises from a covered cause of loss
- Equipment Breakdown Coverage for Equipment Breakdown is included within applicable limits
- Crime Coverage Employee Dishonesty and Forgery or Alteration
- Electronic Data Processing Equipment, Data and Media
- Valuable Papers and Records
- Fine Arts
- Signs
General Liability Highlights
General Liability Limits of $1 million per occurrence / $2 million aggregate are standard with an option for higher limits of $2 million per occurrence / $4 million aggregate or higher.
- Advertising Injury and Personal Injury
- Medical Payments
- Damage to Premises Rented to You
- Blanket Contractual for all insured contracts
- Host liquor liability
- Limited worldwide coverage
- Products/Completed Operations coverage is included
- Coverage includes personal injury, advertising injury and worldwide Web site injury protection (some restrictions apply)
Comme rcial Auto
As a business owner, you need the same kinds of insurance coverages for the car you use in your business as you do for a car used for personal travel -- liability, collision and comprehensive, medical payments (known as personal injury protection in some states) and coverage for uninsured motorists. In fact, many business people use the same vehicle for both business and pleasure. If the vehicle is owned by the business, make sure the name of the business appears on the policy as the "principal insured" rather than your name. This will avoid possible confusion in the event that you need to file a claim or a claim is filed against you.
Whether you need to buy a business auto insurance policy will depend on the kind of driving you do. A good insurance agent will ask you many details about how you use vehicles in your business, who will be driving them and whether employees, if you have them, are likely to be driving their own cars for your business.
Workers Compensation
Employers have a legal responsibility to their employees to make the workplace safe. However, accidents happen even when every reasonable safety measure has been taken.
To protect employers from lawsuits resulting from workplace accidents and to provide medical care and compensation for lost income to employees hurt in workplace accidents, in almost every state, businesses are required to buy workers compensation insurance. Workers compensation insurance covers workers injured on the job, whether they're hurt on the workplace premises or elsewhere, or in auto accidents while on business. It also covers work-related illnesses.
Workers compensation provides payments to injured workers, without regard to who was at fault in the accident, for time lost from work and for medical and rehabilitiation services. It also provides death benefits to surviving spouses and dependents.
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