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Business Insurance Products
Commercial 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.
While the major coverages are the same,
a business auto policy differs from a
personal auto policy in many technical
respects. Ask your insurance agent to
explain all the differences and options.
General Liability
If you have a personal umbrella
liability policy, there's generally an
exclusion for business-related
liability. Make sure you have sufficient
auto liability coverage.
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. The Hartford's
liability programs extend far beyond the
provisions of typical policies, with
broadened coverage and increased limits
in over 30 areas.
Broad Range of General Liability
Protection
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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
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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
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Products Liability is a more
specialized product liability
insurance that protects your company
against lawsuits from
product-related injury or accidents
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Contractual Liability extends to any
liability you may assume by entering
into a variety of contracts
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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
Workers Compensation
Workers compensation laws were created
to ensure that employees who are injured
on the job are provided with fixed
monetary awards. This eliminates the
need for litigation and creates an
easier process for the employee. It also
helps control the financial risks for
employers since many states limit the
amount an injured employee can recover
from an employer.
Workers Compensation Insurance is
designed to help companies pay these
benefits. As a protection for employees,
most states require that employers carry
some form of Workers Compensation
Insurance. Workers Compensation
Insurance is not health insurance.
Workers Compensation is designed
specifically for injuries sustained on
the job.
In most states, if you have employees,
you are required to carry Workers
Compensation coverage. Even in
non-mandatory states, it can be a very
good idea, particularly if you have many
employees, or if they are engaged in
hazardous activities.
Do I need workers compensation
insurance?
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.
Each state has different laws governing
the amount and duration of lost income
benefits, the provision of medical and
rehabilitation services and how the
system is administered. For example, in
most states there are regulations that
cover whether the worker or employer can
choose the doctor who treats the
injuries and how disputes about benefits
are resolved.
Workers compensation insurance must be
bought as a separate policy. Although
in-home business and business owners
policies (BOPs) are sold as package
policies, they don't include coverage
for workers' injuries. |