Limit (Limit of Liability Insurance)

What Is a Limit?

A limit (or limit of liability insurance) is the maximum amount your insurer will pay for covered claims under your policy. Think of it as a piggy bank of insurance money — with a cap on how much can be paid out.

What Are Common Types of Limits of Liability Insurance?

There are different types of limits of liability insurance, including the total for your entire policy year (aggregate limit) and the cap per claim (per-occurrence limit). Together, this pool of money protects your small business with specific allotted amounts.

Limit Type What It Means Where/How You’ll See It

Per-occurrence / Per-claim

The most your policy pays for one claim
“$1,000,000 per occurrence”

General aggregate

The most your policy pays for all claims in a year
“$2,000,000 aggregate”

Products-completed operations aggregate

The maximum annual amount for product or finished-work claims
Relevant for small businesses whose work can cause damage once complete

Sub-limit

Smaller cap for a specific coverage
Typically applies to coverages like Damage to Premises Rented and Medical Expenses

Combined single limit (CSL)

One cap for bodily injury and property damage claims combined
Often in commercial auto policies
Split limits
Separate caps per person, accident, and property
Designated in some auto policies (e.g., 100/300/50)

Limit Type: Per-occurrence / Per-claim

What It Means: The most your policy pays for one claim

Where/How You’ll See It: “$1,000,000 per occurrence”

Limit Type: General aggregate

What It Means: The most your policy pays for all claims in a year

Where/How You’ll See It: “$2,000,000 aggregate”

Limit Type: Products-completed operations aggregate

What It Means: The maximum annual amount for product or finished-work claims

Where/How You’ll See It: Relevant for small businesses whose work can cause damage once complete

Limit Type: Sub-limit

What It Means: Smaller cap for a specific coverage

Where/How You’ll See It: Typically applies to coverages like Damage to Premises Rented and Medical Expenses

Limit Type: Combined single limit (CSL)

What It Means: One cap for bodily injury and property damage claims combined

Where/How You’ll See It: Often in commercial auto policies

Limit Type: Split limits

What It Means: Separate caps per person, accident, and property

Where/How You’ll See It: Designated in some auto policies (e.g., 100/300/50)

The per-occurrence limit applies to a single claim, while the aggregate limit is the total pool of coverage available.

  • Per-occurrence limit: The most your policy will pay for one covered claim
  • Aggregate limit: The most your policy will pay for all covered claims during the policy period (usually a year)


Quick example: A policy listed as $1M/$2M means $1 million per occurrence and $2 million aggregate. You could have multiple claims in a year, but no single claim can exceed $1 million, and all claims combined can’t exceed $2 million.

Consider these factors when deciding if a policy’s base limit is enough or if you should increase your limit:

  • Match contracts and leases: City permits, landlords, and marketplaces sometimes require higher limits than clients do
  • Industry norms: Certain trades or event types typically require specific limits (like $2M/$4M depending on projects or locations)
  • Where and how you operate: Factors like high foot traffic, large venues, and alcohol service warrant higher limits
  • Headcount and subcontractors: The more people involved, the higher the exposure — consider increasing your coverage limits
  • Product or completed-work exposure: Some products or services have a higher chance of causing issues later down the road
  • Per-occurrence vs aggregate balance: Understand that multiple small claims can exhaust a low aggregate limit
  • Quote the next tier: See what the price is for higher limits — they’re often more affordable than you expect

Still not sure? No problem! Our licensed, non-commissioned agents would love to walk you through coverage limits that make sense for your business.

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