What This Calculator Does
The Microapp Business Insurance Cost Estimator gives realistic annual premium ranges for the three policies that cover most small-business risk: General Liability (GL), Professional Liability (E&O), and a Business Owner's Policy (BOP). The numbers come from public industry surveys (Insureon, NEXT, The Hartford, 2023–2024) and are scaled by your revenue, headcount, and industry profile. The output is an honest range — typical insurance quotes vary 2–3× across carriers for the same coverage, so a single point estimate would mislead.
• General Liability: ~$110–$280/year
• Professional Liability (E&O): ~$900–$3,400/year
• BOP (GL + property bundled): ~$890–$2,650/year
• Recommended annual total (BOP + PL): $1,790–$6,050 (~$150–$500/month).
Real quotes from 3 carriers should land somewhere in this band. If yours come in much higher or lower, ask the broker why.
The Three Core Policies
General Liability (GL). Covers third-party bodily injury, third-party property damage, and "advertising injury" (libel, copyright infringement in marketing). Triggered by: a client tripping in your office, your delivery van denting a customer's car, your blog post accidentally borrowing copyrighted imagery. Usually $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate. Required by many commercial leases and most B2B client contracts.
Professional Liability (PL or E&O). Covers economic harm caused by your professional services — bad advice, missed deadlines, errors in deliverables. Different from GL because the harm is financial, not physical. Triggered by: missing a tax filing deadline, writing software with a bug that costs the client revenue, providing consulting advice that backfires. Mandatory by statute for licensed professions (law, medicine, accounting, real estate, financial advisory) and required by most B2B client contracts in tech, marketing, design, and consulting.
Business Owner's Policy (BOP). Bundles GL + commercial property + business interruption + (optionally) data breach into one policy at a 10–25% discount versus buying components separately. Designed for small businesses with under $5–10M revenue in low-to-moderate-risk industries. Most small businesses should start by quoting a BOP, then add PL if needed.
Why These Cost Estimates Vary So Much
Insurance pricing is one of the few markets where the same product (e.g., $1M of General Liability) can legitimately cost 2–3× different amounts at different carriers. The factors:
| Factor | Pricing impact |
|---|---|
| Industry / SIC code | 5–10× swing — construction GL is 5–10× consulting GL |
| Annual revenue | Linear for GL; sublinear (√revenue) for property/BOP |
| Headcount | ~4% per employee; PL especially sensitive to professional staff count |
| State | 30–50% swing — California, Florida, NY, NJ usually most expensive |
| Claims history | One prior claim within 5 years = 1.5–2× premium; multiple claims can disqualify |
| Deductible | $500 vs $5,000 deductible = ~30% premium difference |
| Coverage limits | $1M vs $2M = ~15–25% more for the higher limit |
| Years in business | New businesses often pay 20–40% more; insurers reward stability |
What This Calculator Does NOT Cover
Workers' compensation. Mandatory in most US states for any business with employees (sole proprietors and most LLCs without employees are exempt). Costs 1–5% of payroll for low-risk industries; 10–20%+ for construction, manufacturing, healthcare. Get this quoted alongside your GL/PL/BOP from the same broker.
Commercial auto. Required if your business owns or leases vehicles, or if employees drive personal vehicles for work (then you need "hired & non-owned auto" coverage, which is cheap — usually $300–$700/year). A commercial auto policy on a single vehicle runs $1,200–$2,500/year.
Cyber liability. Strongly recommended for any business handling customer data or payment information. Pricing varies wildly with ransomware risk; expect $1,500–$10,000/year for a small business with modest data exposure, scaling with the number of records stored. Many BOP carriers offer limited cyber as a $500–$2,000/year add-on with $100k of coverage limits.
Directors & Officers (D&O). Important if you've raised outside investment or have a formal board. Covers personal liability of directors/officers for governance decisions. Typically $1,500–$5,000/year for early-stage funded startups; much more for venture-backed companies.
Employment Practices Liability (EPLI). Covers wrongful termination, discrimination, and harassment claims. Costs $800–$3,000/year for a small business; usually offered as a BOP rider.
Where to Buy: Online Direct vs Broker vs Captive
Online direct (Hiscox, NEXT Insurance, biBerk, Thimble, etc.). Best for: simple operations, low-risk industries, businesses that want fast quotes (often 10 minutes) and same-day binding. Usually cheapest for consultants, freelancers, e-commerce, and services. Limitation: their underwriting boxes are narrow — if your business has any unusual element, you'll get declined or hit with surcharges.
Independent broker (NFP, Hub International, local brokers). Best for: complex operations, multi-state businesses, anyone with prior claims, businesses needing specialty coverage (cyber, EPLI, professional malpractice). Brokers quote 5–10 carriers and pick the best fit. Their commission is paid by the insurer, not you — so service is free at point of purchase, but premium reflects commission.
Captive agents (State Farm, Allstate, Farmers). Best for: businesses that already have a relationship and value one-stop convenience. Limitation: only sell their own carrier, so you're getting a single quote, not a market check.
Recommended approach: get one quote from an online direct provider AND one quote from an independent broker. Compare. Pick the cheaper option assuming coverage is identical (read the declarations page side-by-side; carriers can have meaningfully different exclusions).
Common Mistakes
Underinsuring to save money. The marginal cost of going from $1M to $2M of liability coverage is usually 15–25%. The marginal cost of being underinsured when a $3M lawsuit lands is the rest of the lawsuit out of your business assets. Buy enough coverage to cover a realistic worst-case loss, even if premiums sting a little.
Letting the "additional insured" certificate slide. Most B2B contracts require you to add the client as an "additional insured" on your GL policy. This is free and your broker can issue the certificate within 24 hours — but skipping the request leaves you in breach of contract. Add it for every client that asks.
Not reading exclusions. All policies exclude certain risks. Common GL exclusions: pollution, employment practices, professional services, contractual liability not in the insured contract. If your business has any of these exposures, buy them as separate coverage; don't assume the GL covers them.
Misclassifying your industry on the application. Insurance companies categorize businesses by SIC code, and getting it wrong can void coverage. If you're a "marketing consultant" but you also build websites, that's two SIC codes — disclose both. If you're audited later and the carrier discovers misclassification, they can deny claims and rescind the policy.
Educational Tool — Not Insurance Advice
This calculator implements rough industry-average pricing for budgeting purposes. It's not a quote, not a binding offer, and not insurance advice. For an actual quote, contact a licensed insurance broker in your state. For coverage adequacy advice, consult a risk-management consultant or your business attorney — never rely on a calculator (or a commissioned salesperson's recommendation) to decide how much coverage your business needs.
Related Tools
Use the Break-Even Calculator to see how much insurance premium fits in your fixed-cost line. The Freelance Rate Calculator includes a business-expenses input — your insurance premium goes there. For modeling business loans to fund operations, the Loan Calculator handles standard amortization.