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Package Policy

What Is a Commercial Package Insurance Policy?

A package policy, or package insurance policy, is a combination policy that provides several different coverages.

Think of it as a convenient way to bundle the coverage you need under one policy — making it easier to manage your insurance and focus instead on growing your small business.

What Is an Example of a Package Insurance Policy?

An example of a package insurance policy is a combined general and professional liability policy for a service-based business. For example, a massage therapist or yoga instructor might buy one policy that includes:

  • General liability insurance: Protects you if a client trips over a mat or stool and gets hurt in your space, or claims you damaged their property
  • Professional liability insurance (errors & omissions): Covers your business if a client says your massage technique or instruction caused an injury or failed to deliver the service they expected
  • Inland marine coverage (tools & equipment): Pays to repair or replace your movable business personal property; for example, if your mobile massage table is stolen while you’re on the go

A commercial package insurance policy is created to protect against your unique risks. They vary by insurer, but could include a combination of coverages such as:

  • Commercial general liability: For third-party bodily injury or property damage claims that happen at your business
  • Professional liability: For claims related to professional errors or omissions you unintentionally make
  • Inland marine (aka gear and equipment insurance): To protect your mobile business tools, equipment, and supplies against theft or damage
  • Commercial property insurance: Covers your building, if owned, or business contents like inventory, furniture, and fixtures
  • Business personal property: Covers your business-related items at your main business premises


Other add-ons include coverage for commercial auto, business interruption, workers compensation, and other small business exposures.

A package policy combines more than one type of coverage (most commonly general liability and commercial property) into one small business insurance policy.

For example, an insurance agent creates a policy tailored to your business needs. Then, your business is protected by those various coverages — each kicks in to do its job when you need to file a claim.

For many small businesses, this setup is easier to manage and is often more cost-effective than buying each coverage separately.

A package policy may make sense for your business if:

  • You rent or own a space and want to protect both your building and what’s inside it
  • You use equipment, tools, or inventory that would be expensive to repair or replace
  • You want fewer policies to manage and prefer working with a single insurer
  • You’d like to reduce the chance of gaps between separate liability and property policies

When considering purchasing insurance as a package or separately, think about how you want your coverage to work for you.

  • Separate policies: Each coverage has its own contract, premium, and renewal date
  • Package policy: Each coverage is grouped under one easy policy


Small business owners often prefer package policies because they can be simpler to manage. They may also offer pricing advantages or built-in coverages that would otherwise need to be added individually.

Commercial Package Policy vs Separate Insurance Policies: A Quick Guide

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Package Policy Separate Policies

Number of Policies

One combined policy
Multiple individual policies

Types of Coverage

Bundles multiple coverage types
Liability, property, and other coverages are each purchased separately

Cost Efficiency

Often priced more competitively as a bundle
May cost more when each coverage is purchased alone

Ease of Management

One bill, one renewal, and one insurer to contact
Multiple bills, renewal dates, and insurers to contact

Customization

Can be customized with endorsements and add-ons
Each policy can be tailored separately, but requires more handling

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    Exclusions

    This policy is not designed to cover:

    • Industrial control engineers
    • Defense contractors
    • Medical software companies
    • Crypto exchanges
    • Gambling platforms
    • Physical security system installers
    •  Heavy equipment integrators

     

    Not available if you manage or control systems involving:

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    • If you build firmware or embedded software controlling industrial physical equipment.
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    • National defense
    • Homeland security
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    • Weapons
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    • If more than 25% of your revenue comes from:
      • Federal government work
      • Military or defense operations
    • If more than 50% of your revenue comes from:
    • Equipment installation
    • Maintenance
    • Physical service work



    Restricted if you work in:

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    • For-rent-by-owner platforms
    • Help-for-hire platforms
    • Delivery services
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    • Cryptocurrency / blockchain / NFTs
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    • GPS systems
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