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Public liability insurance
In case your business and products cause an injury or property damage.
What’s typically covered by public liability insurance?
Claims against your business for:
- damage to someone’s property, because of your business
- injuries or illness caused by your business activities
- an employee (if you have any) accidentally damages property or causes injury
For example:
- a client is injured by a forklift operator while visiting your business, and makes a claim against you
- a maintenance professional slips on your shop floor following a spillage, fracturing their knee
- your employee uses a new product with a client, and they have an allergic reaction to it
**If you do employ anyone, you’re usually required by law to have employers’ liability insurance too.**
Read more about public liability insurance
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Employers’ liability insurance
In case anyone gets ill or injured while working for your dry lining business
What’s typically covered by employers’ liability insurance?
Claims against your business for:
- an injury to someone you employ, including contractors and temps, that happens as a result of working for you
- a member of staff (including casual workers) falling ill due to your business
**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.**
For example:
- one of your employees falls down some stairs in your business premises, and makes a claim against you for chronic shoulder pain
- a temporary employee traps their hand in a door at your premises, causing several fractures
- a member of staff trips on a ledge on their way to a meeting, injuring their hip
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Contents insurance
In case something happens to your fixtures, fittings, or operational equipment.
What’s typically covered by business equipment insurance?
Claims against your business for:
- damage and destruction caused by flood, fire, vandalism, or theft
- cover for your contents and the equipment needed to run your business
For example:
- a flood spreads to your office floor and means you need to replace several desk chairs
- your photocopier and fax machine are badly damaged during a break-in
- four business smartphones are stolen from your premises
Read more about business equipment insurance
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Stock insurance
In case something happens to your products and consumables.
What’s typically covered by stock insurance?
Claims against your business for:
- damage to (and loss of) stock, following fires, floods, or vandalism
- theft of stock following a break-in
- costs involved with replacing the stock you need to operate
For example :
- someone forces entry to your business premises and steals from your stockroom
- an important stock order falls from the back of your van and is never recovered
- you’ve taken a stock delivery, which is stolen while you’re speaking to a neighbour
Read more about stock insurance
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Tool insurance
In case your tools are lost, stolen or damaged.
What’s typically covered by tool insurance?
Claims against your business for:
- stolen tools and equipment
- accidental damage to the tools you need for your business
- loss of specialist equipment and drylining tools
For example:
- your business tools are damaged in a fire or flood
- your equipment is stolen while you’re on the job
- you lose your tools and equipment while travelling
Read more about tool insurance
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Business interruption insurance
In case something is stolen or damaged and you lose income.
What’s typically covered by business interruption insurance?
- you can’t trade because of stock, contents, or building damage
For example:
- your inventory is damaged and you lose income because you’re unable to sell
- your work laptop is stolen or damaged and you can’t run your business
Read more about business interruption insurance
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Own plant insurance
In case plant machinery, like excavators, you own is lost, stolen, or damaged.
What’s typically covered by own plant insurance?
Claims against your business for:
- damaging someone else’s property while working on a development site, or afterwards as a result of your work
- damage or destruction caused by vandalism
- damage or loss to your plant machinery, like a digger
For example :
- your forklift damages a van parked nearby, while you’re manoeuvring on site
- you’re building an extension for a customer and someone breaks into your works site, vandalising the premises and causing substantial damage
- you’re parked up outside a service station and thieves steal a generator from your trailer
Read more about plant machinery insurance
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Hired-in plant insurance
In case plant machinery, like excavators, you’ve hired in is lost, stolen, or damaged.
What’s typically covered by hired-in plant insurance?
Claims against your business for:
- replacing hired-in plant machinery should it be damaged or stolen
- water damage to hired-in plant machinery
- accidentally injuring someone else while you’re working, or afterwards as a result of the work you’ve done
For example :
- there’s an overnight break-in at your work site and an excavator is stolen
- you cause damage to a water pipe by drilling through it while working on site
- a flood damages a hired cement mixer and generator beyond repair
Read more about plant machinery insurance
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Contract works insurance
In case your building work in progress is damaged by something like a fire, flood or vandalism.
What’s typically covered by contract works insurance?
Claims against your business for:
- work in progress on domestic and commercial sites
- on-site damage to your tools that you need to complete the job
For example :
- there’s a fire at your place of work, setting back the completion date of the job
- a flood destroys your specialist drylining equipment
- someone breaks into your site and steals your tools
Read more about contract works insurance
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Business legal insurance
In case you’re hit with legal expenses connected to your business.
What’s typically covered by business legal insurance?
Claims against your business for:
- unpaid invoices
- contracts for the purchase, hire, sale, or provision of goods or services provided to you
- an alleged breach of statutory rights with an employee
For example:
- you need to recover debt after a client refused to pay their invoice, caused by a contractual dispute
- you’re facing legal costs as a client is disputing whether you met your contractual obligations with your hire agreement
Read more about business legal insurance
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Personal accident insurance
In case anyone you’ve covered is accidentally injured, at work or away from work.
What’s typically covered by personal accident insurance?
- compensation if you or an employee are injured in an accident, including weekly payments if you or they are unable to work for two weeks or more
- virtual Medical Care service with unlimited 24/7 access to medical advice, consultations, referrals and prescriptions
- 24/7 access to myStrength emotional health support app
You can buy this cover for:
For example:
- imagine one of your employees breaks their leg in an accident and is out of work for six weeks. Personal accident insurance would provide £300 for the broken leg diagnosis. After the employee’s second week off, you’d receive four weekly payments to assist with costs during their absence. You could use the money as you wish – whether for loss of earnings, hiring a temporary replacement, or compensating the injured employee.
What’s not covered?
- issues caused by sickness, illness, or disease
- conditions that develop over time without a direct connection to an accident
- mental illness, even if triggered by an accident
- self-inflicted injuries
- accidents that occur under the influence of drugs or misuse of medication
- deliberate exposure to danger, except when attempting to save a life
- injuries caused by taking part in a professional or semi-professional sport
Read more about personal accident insurance