What the policy needs to reflect
For professional service firms, the core underwriting question is how advice, designs, reports, recommendations, project work and other professional services could create a client dispute. A useful policy review should describe the real services being delivered rather than relying on a broad profession label.
- Declared activities and any work that falls outside the usual service description.
- Largest contract values, client sectors, framework requirements and minimum indemnity limits.
- Claims, complaints, contractual disputes or circumstances that could become a claim.
Cover points to check before buying
PI policies are normally claims-made, so continuity, retroactive cover and wording detail can matter as much as the premium. A lower-cost quote may be poor value if it does not satisfy client contracts or if exclusions remove the work that creates the real exposure.
- Limit of indemnity, excess, retroactive date and run-off considerations.
- Civil liability, negligence, breach of professional duty and intellectual-property wording where relevant.
- Whether public liability, cyber, management liability or legal expenses should sit alongside PI.
Typical claim triggers
Professional indemnity claims often start with a client saying advice, design, administration or project delivery caused avoidable financial loss. Even where liability is disputed, legal defence and document review can become expensive quickly.
- Alleged negligent advice, missed deadlines, incorrect reports or unsuitable recommendations.
- Contract disputes where a client says professional work failed to meet agreed standards.
- Rework, delay, lost opportunity or third-party costs passed back to the professional firm.
Quote preparation checklist
Clear information improves quote quality. Before requesting terms, gather the details insurers usually need so cover can be compared on wording as well as price.
- Business description, turnover, fee income, contract size and required limit.
- Standard terms, client contracts, qualifications, quality controls and complaint procedures.
- Past cover details, retroactive date, claims history and any known circumstances.
When PI cover should be reviewed again
Professional indemnity cover should be reviewed before a larger contract is signed, when the business starts a new service, when clients request higher limits or when work becomes more technical, regulated or contract-led. Waiting until renewal can leave too little time to fix wording gaps.
- Review limits when project values, client size or tender requirements increase.
- Check the activity description after adding new advice, design, data or project responsibilities.
- Revisit retroactive and run-off needs if the business changes insurer, closes, sells or restructures.
Why broker presentation matters
Many PI risks are priced on how clearly the professional work is presented. A vague proposal can make a good business look harder to place, while a clear summary of services, controls, contracts and claims history can help insurers understand the real exposure.
- Explain what the business does, what it does not do and where responsibility ends.
- Highlight quality controls, sign-off processes, peer review and complaint handling.
- Separate low-risk advisory income from higher-risk design, technical or regulated work.