Business Insurance for UK Small Businesses — Complete Guide 2026

Getting the right insurance is one of the least exciting parts of starting a business — but getting it wrong can be catastrophic. This guide explains every main type of UK business insurance in plain English, tells you which ones are legally required, and helps you work out what you actually need.

Important: This guide is for general information only. Insurance needs vary widely by trade, size, and circumstances. Always speak to a regulated insurance broker or insurer before buying a policy.

Which Business Insurance Is Legally Required in the UK?

Most business insurance is optional — but two types are compulsory for the majority of UK businesses:

Insurance Type Who Must Have It Minimum Cover Regulator
Employers' Liability Insurance Any business that employs staff (including part-time, temporary, and some contractors) £5 million per claim Health & Safety Executive (HSE)
Motor Insurance Any business using vehicles on public roads Third-party, fire & theft minimum DVLA / MIB

Failing to hold valid employers' liability insurance when required can result in a fine of up to £2,500 per day. The certificate must be displayed at every workplace (or made readily accessible electronically).

Sole traders with no employees are generally exempt from employers' liability insurance, but you should still check — some contracts and industry bodies require it regardless.

Public Liability Insurance

Public liability (PL) insurance covers you if a member of the public — a customer, supplier, or passerby — is injured or has their property damaged as a result of your business activities. It is not a legal requirement, but it is one of the most important policies a small business can hold.

What it covers

  • Compensation claims for personal injury to third parties
  • Damage to third-party property caused by you or your employees
  • Legal defence costs

What it does not cover

  • Injuries to your own employees (that is employers' liability)
  • Damage to your own property
  • Deliberate acts

Cover levels typically range from £1 million to £10 million. Many contracts, venues, and trade associations require a minimum of £2 million. If you work in construction or undertake high-risk activities, £5 million or more is often required.

Good to know: Many freelancers and home-based businesses believe they do not need public liability insurance. If a client ever visits your home office and is injured, your standard home insurance almost certainly will not cover it. A PL policy fills that gap.

Employers' Liability Insurance

As noted above, employers' liability (EL) insurance is a legal requirement as soon as you take on staff. It covers claims made by employees who suffer illness or injury as a result of their work for you.

The law requires you to hold at least £5 million of cover from an authorised insurer, though most policies provide £10 million as standard. You must keep your EL certificate for at least 40 years, as workplace injury claims can be brought long after the event.

Bear in mind that "employees" includes:

  • Full-time and part-time staff on PAYE
  • Temporary and seasonal workers
  • Work experience placements and apprentices
  • Some labour-only subcontractors (check the specific rules with your insurer)

Professional Indemnity Insurance

Professional indemnity (PI) insurance — sometimes called errors and omissions (E&O) — protects you if a client claims that your advice, designs, or professional services caused them a financial loss.

It is essential for anyone who:

  • Gives professional advice (consultants, accountants, solicitors, financial advisers)
  • Designs or specifies products (architects, engineers, IT developers)
  • Handles client data or intellectual property
  • Works in healthcare or education

PI insurance is compulsory by regulation for certain professions, including solicitors, financial advisers, and architects. For everyone else, it may still be required by your clients' contracts.

Business Type Typical Cover Required
Freelance consultant or copywriter £100,000 – £500,000
IT contractor or developer £500,000 – £1 million
Architect or structural engineer £1 million – £5 million
Accountant or financial adviser £1 million+ (often regulated minimum)

PI policies are written on a claims-made basis, which means the policy active when the claim is made — not when the work was done — responds. This makes it vital to maintain cover even after a contract ends, using a "run-off" period of typically two to six years.

Cyber Insurance

Cyber insurance has become increasingly important for UK small businesses. A data breach, ransomware attack, or system outage can cost tens of thousands of pounds in recovery costs, regulatory fines, and lost revenue — yet many standard business policies exclude cyber events entirely.

What cyber insurance typically covers

  • Costs of investigating and containing a breach
  • Notifying affected customers (required under UK GDPR)
  • Regulatory fines (where insurable under UK law)
  • Business interruption losses caused by a cyber event
  • Ransomware payments and negotiation costs
  • Public relations and reputational damage management
  • Legal defence if customers sue over a data breach
UK GDPR note: Under UK GDPR you must report serious data breaches to the ICO within 72 hours. Cyber insurance often includes 24/7 incident response support to help you meet this deadline. See our GDPR for Small Businesses guide for more detail.

Even if you are a sole trader with a single laptop, if you hold customer data — names, email addresses, payment details — cyber insurance is worth serious consideration. Annual premiums for basic cover can start from as little as £150–£300 for small businesses.

Business Interruption Insurance

Business interruption (BI) insurance — also called business income insurance — covers the loss of income your business suffers when it cannot operate normally due to an insured event, such as a fire, flood, or major equipment failure.

Standard property insurance replaces the physical damage. Business interruption insurance replaces the profit you lose while you rebuild or recover. Without it, you could find yourself unable to pay wages, rent, or suppliers even though your physical assets are fully covered.

Key terms to understand

  • Indemnity period: The length of time the insurer will cover your losses — typically 12, 24, or 36 months. Choose a period long enough to realistically get back to normal trading.
  • Maximum indemnity period: The upper limit of the cover — make sure it is realistic for your business recovery time.
  • Sum insured: Usually based on gross profit or gross revenue. Underinsuring is a common and costly mistake.
COVID-19 lesson: The pandemic exposed widespread gaps in BI policies, particularly around disease exclusions. Always read the policy wording carefully — and ask your broker specifically about pandemic, notifiable disease, and supply chain interruption clauses.

Other Types of Business Insurance to Consider

Policy What It Covers Who Needs It
Product Liability Injury or damage caused by products you manufacture, supply, or sell Any business that makes or sells physical goods
Commercial Property Buildings and contents against fire, flood, theft, and accidental damage Businesses with a physical premises or significant equipment
Commercial Vehicle Business use of cars, vans, HGVs Any business using vehicles for work (personal car policies exclude business use)
Directors & Officers (D&O) Personal liability of company directors for management decisions Limited companies — especially those with external investors or creditors
Key Person Insurance Loss of income if a key employee or director dies or becomes critically ill SMEs heavily reliant on one or two individuals
Tool and Equipment Insurance Loss, theft, or accidental damage to business tools and equipment Tradespeople and mobile businesses
Legal Expenses Insurance Legal costs for employment disputes, contract disputes, HMRC investigations Most small businesses — relatively low cost and high value

How to Buy Business Insurance

There are three main routes:

  1. Direct from an insurer — Simple policies (PL, EL, sole trader packages) can be bought online quickly. Good for straightforward needs.
  2. Via a comparison site — Sites such as Simply Business or Policybee aggregate quotes from multiple insurers. Useful for benchmarking price, but read the policy wording, not just the price.
  3. Through a regulated broker — For complex or higher-value risks, a broker (authorised by the FCA) can tailor cover and advise on gaps. The British Insurance Brokers' Association (BIBA) operates a free broker-finder at biba.org.uk.

Tips for getting the right cover

  • Be completely accurate about your business activities — undisclosed activities can void a claim
  • Do not underinsure to save on premiums — a co-insurance clause can leave you with a large shortfall
  • Review your cover annually and whenever your business changes significantly
  • Check that subcontractors you hire hold their own valid insurance
  • Keep records of all certificates, especially EL certificates (40-year rule)
Quick checklist for a new UK small business:
  • Employers' liability (£5m minimum) — required if you have staff
  • Public liability — strongly recommended for virtually all businesses
  • Professional indemnity — required if you give advice or provide professional services
  • Cyber insurance — recommended if you hold any customer data
  • Business interruption — recommended if a trading halt would threaten your survival
  • Commercial vehicle — required if you drive for business

Frequently Asked Questions

No — public liability insurance is not a legal requirement, but it is effectively essential for most businesses that interact with customers, suppliers, or the public. Many venues, councils, and corporate clients require a minimum of £1–5 million PLI cover before you can work with them.

Typically £120–£500+ per year for small businesses, depending on your industry, the number of employees, and the nature of the work. Most standard policies provide £10 million cover — the legal minimum is £5 million. Some insurers bundle EL with public liability at a discounted combined price.

Professional indemnity (PI) insurance covers claims that your advice, designs, or professional services caused financial loss to a client — even if the claim is unfounded. It is essential for consultants, designers, IT contractors, accountants, architects, and anyone providing professional services for a fee.

Only if you employ someone. Sole traders with no employees are exempt from the Employers Liability (Compulsory Insurance) Act 1969. However, the moment you take on a member of staff — even one part-time employee or family member — you must arrange EL cover immediately.

Cyber insurance typically covers the cost of investigating and containing a breach, notifying affected customers (required under UK GDPR), business interruption losses while systems are restored, legal defence costs, and in some policies ransom payments. Basic cover for SMEs starts from around £200 per year.