Nigel Holland founder of Holland & Co Chartered Accountants from Widnes Cheshire

 

“Insurance isn’t there to make you money. It’s there to stop one incident destroying the business you’ve worked hard to build.”

Quote by Nigel Holland BA (Hons) FCA

Name

Business Insurance

Running a business always involves risk. The right insurance won’t stop problems happening, but it can stop a bad day turning into a serious financial setback.

Whether you’re a sole trader, partnership, or limited company, business insurance helps protect your income, your reputation, your staff, your premises, and your legal position.

Why business insurance matters

If something goes wrong, the costs can add up quickly:

Compensation and legal fees after a claim

Replacing damaged stock, tools, or equipment

Loss of income following a fire, flood, or theft

Professional claims for errors, omissions, or negligent advice

Employer-related claims if you have staff

Cyber incidents, data loss, and ransomware disruption

For many businesses, one uninsured incident can wipe out months (or years) of profit.

Core types of business insurance (UK)

    1. Public Liability Insurance
      Protects you if a member of the public is injured or their property is damaged because of your business activities. Common for trades, retail, hospitality, mobile services, and anyone working at client premises.

    2. Employers’ Liability Insurance
      A legal requirement in most cases if you employ staff (including some casual and part-time arrangements). Covers claims from employees who are injured or become ill due to work.

    3. Professional Indemnity Insurance
      Essential for advisers, consultants, designers, IT providers, and anyone providing professional services or advice. Covers claims for negligence, errors, omissions, or breach of professional duty.

    4. Product Liability Insurance
      If you sell, supply, manufacture, or import products, this covers claims arising from injury or damage caused by those products.

    5. Business Contents and Equipment Cover
      Protects tools, laptops, machinery, office contents, and other equipment. Particularly important for trades and businesses with high-value kit.

    6. Commercial Property Insurance
      If you own or lease premises, you may need cover for the building, fixtures, and fittings. Landlords may also require specific cover under the lease.

    7. Business Interruption Insurance
      Helps replace lost income and ongoing costs if you can’t trade due to an insured event (such as fire or flood). This is often what keeps cashflow stable during disruption.

    8. Cyber Insurance
      Helps with response costs, data recovery, business interruption from cyber incidents, and potential liabilities relating to data breaches. Increasingly relevant for any business holding customer data.

What level of cover do you need?

The “right” policy depends on what you do and how you operate. Insurers typically look at:

Your trade or profession and risk profile

Turnover and number of staff

Where you work (home, office, client sites, public-facing premises)

Contract requirements (many clients insist on specific cover limits)

Value of tools, equipment, stock, and premises

Data you hold and reliance on IT systems

Your subcontractor arrangements (and whether they have their own cover)

You want cover that’s adequate, but not wasteful. Underinsuring can lead to claim reductions; overinsuring simply drains profit.

Common pitfalls to avoid

Assuming a home insurance policy covers business activity

Not checking policy exclusions (especially for high-risk work or unusual activities)

Forgetting to update turnover, staff numbers, or equipment values

Having professional indemnity that doesn’t match contract requirements

Relying on subcontractors’ cover without verifying it

Not including business interruption (often missed, often critical)

Practical checklist before you buy or renew

Confirm what you must have (employers’ liability, landlord/lease requirements, client contracts)

List your main risks: public injury, advice/service risk, premises risk, IT risk, product risk

Total up your equipment/tools/stock replacement values

Confirm your turnover and number of employees

Decide sensible cover limits (your insurer/broker can guide, but base it on real exposure)

Keep the policy schedule and certificates accessible (some clients will ask)

How we can help

We can help you identify the likely insurance areas you should consider based on how your business actually operates, and we can highlight common gaps we see when reviewing businesses.

Insurance is only one part of risk management, but it’s a key part of protecting profits and keeping the business resilient.

Other ways Holland & Co may help you

Holland & Co Chartered Accountants
102 Widnes Road
Widnes, Cheshire WA8 6AX

ICAEW Chartered Accountants
Quick Links
Home
About Us
Services
Tax Advice
Contact Us
Legal
Privacy Policy
Terms & Conditions
Cookie Policy
Complaints Procedure
Get in Touch
Tel: 0151 420 6666
Email: nigel@hollandandcompany.co.uk
Make an Enquiry
© 2026 Holland & Co Chartered Accountants. All rights reserved.