Limited Company Insurance from £3.19 per month (2024)

Public liability insurance

In case your limited business is blamed for an injury or property damage.

What’s typically covered by public liability insurance for limited company?

Claims against your business for:

  • damage to someone’s property, caused by your limited company

  • injuries caused by your business activities

  • accidental damage or injury caused by your employees, if you have any

If you do employ anyone, you’re usually required by law to have employers’ liability insurance too.

For example:

  • you’re running a catering business, and a customer gets food poisoning after eating your products

  • a customer’s wooden coving gets damaged by your welding business

Read more about public liability insurance

Employers’ liability insurance

In case an employee gets sick or injured because of working for your limited company.

What’s typically covered by employers’ liability insurance?

Claims against your business for:

  • an employee, including a contractor or casual labourer, suing you after falling ill because of working for your limited company, or

  • making a claim for an injury they’ve had while working for you

For example:

  • an apprentice burns their hand while working with you, and makes a compensation claim

  • a former employee, who broke her knee in your office, raises a claim against you for ongoing complications with her recovery

**Employers’ liability insurance is required by law if you have people working for you. Without it, you could be fined up to £2,500 a day for each employee.**

Professional indemnity insurance

In case there’s a claim for loss-causing errors or issues with your work.

What’s typically covered by professional indemnity insurance?

Claims against your business for professional negligence or a loss-causing breach of contract. This can include:

For example:

  • a client misses a deadline in their new product launch, and claims this is due to an error on your part

  • your limited company receives a claim for compensation, after an employee sends an email containing sensitive data to the wrong recipient

Read more about professional indemnity insurance

Personal accident insurance

In case anyone you’ve covered is accidentally injured, at work or elsewhere.

What’s typically covered by personal accident insurance?

  • accidental injury or death at or outside of work, for anyone covered on the policy

  • lost income, medical costs, and hospitalisation benefit

For example:

  • you sprain your ankle while jogging, and can’t work at full capacity for four weeks

  • your secretary trips over while working at an event, fracturing their wrist

Read more about personal accident insurance

Contents and office equipment insurance

In case something happens to your fixtures and fittings or operational equipment.

What’s typically covered by contents and office equipment insurance?

  • accidental damage to your fixtures and fittings, or the equipment you use to run the business

  • theft, flood, and fire damage

For example:

  • your business partner drops your laptop from a height, damaging it beyond repair

  • a flood in your premises damages your furniture and office equipment, which all needs replacing

Read more about business and office equipment insurance

Tools insurance

In case your trade tools are lost, stolen, or damaged.

What’s typically covered by tools insurance?

  • loss, damage, or theft of your hand tools, power tools, and/or specialist equipment

For example:

Read more about tools insurance

Stock insurance

In case something happens to the materials and products you keep in supply.

What’s typically covered by stock insurance?

  • loss, damage, or theft of your work materials, or items you’re planning to sell

For example:

  • you own a window installation company and your stock is destroyed in a fire at your garage unit

  • a large order of food and drink products goes bad when a power surge disconnects your fridge-freezer unit

Read more about stock insurance

Building insurance

In case something happens to your business premises.

What’s typically covered by building insurance?

  • the cost of repairing damage to the structure of your building (or rebuilding it from scratch)

  • damage to fixtures and fittings

  • damage to underground pipes and cables you’re responsible for

For example:

  • a fire caused by a deep fat fryer causes serious structural damage to your building

  • your windows and roof are damaged during a storm, and you need to temporarily close the business

What you’ll need additional cover for:

  • tenants’ improvements – changes to the property’s structure which you’ve organised and paid for yourself, like partition walls or wooden flooring

Read more about business buildings insurance

Own plant insurance

In case your own plant machinery, like a floor sander, is lost, stolen, or damaged.

What’s typically covered by own plant insurance?

  • loss, damage, or theft of larger equipment like excavators, skips, and sanding machines

For example:

  • the sanding machine you’ve recently bought is stolen from your works site, and needs replacing

  • your cement mixers are damaged in a fire

What you’ll need additional cover for:

  • plant machinery you’ve rented – you’ll need to add our specific hired-in plant cover for this

Read more about own plant insurance

Hired-in plant insurance

In case your rented plant machinery, like an excavator, is lost, stolen, or damaged.

What’s typically covered by hired-in plant insurance?

  • loss, damage, or theft of things like drilling units and saws which you’ve hired in

For example:

  • you hire an excavator for a job and your employee reverses into it, causing damage

  • the saws you’ve hired for a big hotel renovation contract are stolen from your locked garage

What you’ll need additional cover for:

  • tools and plant machinery which you own yourself – you’ll need to add our specific own plant insurance or tools cover for this

Read more about hired-in plant insurance

Legal expenses insurance

In case you have to pay legal costs connected with your limited company.

What’s typically covered by legal expenses insurance?

  • legal costs attributed to your limited company

  • property damage, nuisance, or trespass – specifically, the associated legal claims and compensation payouts

  • tax and compliance disputes, and investigations you need help with

  • includes a tax advice helpline, a 24/7 confidential legal helpline, and crisis PR support to help you protect your company’s reputation

For example:

  • your business hasn’t been correctly registered for tax with HMRC, and you begin to incur legal costs

  • one of your part-time employees is classified incorrectly as a contractor, and you need to hire expert legal support

Read more about legal expenses insurance

Personal accident insurance

In case anyone you’ve covered is accidentally injured, at or away from work.

What’s typically covered by personal accident insurance?

  • accidental injury or death at work or elsewhere, for anyone covered on the policy

  • lost income, medical costs, and hospitalisation benefit

For example:

  • you break your leg while running at the weekend, and need time away from the business for hospital treatment

  • an employee, who you’ve covered on the policy, injures her hand on a piece of machinery in your workshop, and needs a few weeks off work for physio and recovery

Read more about personal accident insurance

Limited Company Insurance from £3.19 per month (2024)

FAQs

What insurance do you need for a market stall? ›

Do you need public liability insurance for a market stall? If you want to be protected against any injury to a member of the public or damage to their property due to negligence, then you will need public liability insurance.

What does professional indemnity insurance cover? ›

Professional indemnity insurance protects you against claims for loss or damage made by clients or third parties as a result of the impact of negligent services you provided or negligent advice you offered. Compensation claims can be brought against you even if you provided a service or offered advice for free.

Do you need insurance for a limited company in the UK? ›

Does a limited company have to be insured? If you employ anyone, even from home, employers' liability insurance is usually a legal requirement. Other than that, there's no legal requirement in the UK to have specific business insurance in place.

What insurance do I need to run my own business? ›

When you're starting your own business, some types of coverage you should make sure to have are: General liability insurance. Professional liability insurance. Workers' compensation insurance.

What type of insurance does a production company need? ›

The necessary production insurance is a mix of insurance policies. Including general liability, equipment, workers' comp, errors and omissions, and specialty insurance. Each has a premium and most have a deductible. All adding up to about 2.5% of the film or show's budget, depending on budget size.

How much does indemnity insurance cost? ›

What is the cost of professional indemnity insurance? AXA customers pay prices from £6.17* a month or £75** a year for professional indemnity insurance. It's important to note that no two businesses have the same cost. There are several other factors that impact how much your premium will be.

What happens if I don't have professional indemnity insurance? ›

If your firm is uninsured

If you firm does not have cover, any claims and associated costs, plus interest, can be recovered from your firm's principals. A grant may be provided for this by the SRA compensation fund (see rule 3.4(a) of the SRA Compensation Fund Rules).

Do I need indemnity insurance? ›

If someone has given you money to help with your deposit, you could need indemnity insurance. Because, if that person is ever declared bankrupt, their creditors could make a claim on your property. The insurance could protect you from lost value if this occurred.

Do I need to have a limited company? ›

Choosing to become a sole trader or limited company is a decision which depends a lot on your personal circ*mstances, and your plans for the business. Investing in some specialist advice when you're starting out can save you time and money over the first few years of self-employment.

What sort of insurance do I need? ›

There are many types of insurance available, but there are some which top the charts in terms of importance. Home or property insurance, life insurance, disability insurance, health insurance, and automobile insurance are five types that everyone should have.

What does directors and officers insurance cover? ›

D&O insurance reimburses the defense costs incurred by board members, managers, and employees in defending against claims made by shareholders or third parties for alleged wrongdoing. D&O insurance also covers monetary damages, settlements, and awards resulting from such claims.

What does market stall insurance cover? ›

This covers your liability for damage to property or injury to a third party that occurs in your designated market stall or exhibit area. Public Liability insurance covers your liability for damage to property or injury to a third party that occurs in your designated market stall or exhibit area.

What is a vendor's insurance policy? ›

A vendor insurance policy protects you from liability for customer injury or illness, property damage, and even advertising injury.

What insurance do you need for a shop? ›

Employer's liability insurance is a legal requirement – you could be fined if adequate cover is not in place. Unfortunately, a fire, flooding, theft and other damage to your shop could occur. Without shop insurance, the money to repair or replace such aspects will come out of your pocket.

What insurance should a marketing agency have? ›

General Liability Insurance for marketing professionals

General liability insurance, sometimes called Commercial General Liability (CGL), could protect your business from another person or business's claims of bodily injury, associated medical costs, and damage to property.

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