Client and vendor contract insurance review.
Client and vendor contracts often carry insurance requirements that are easy to agree to and hard to actually meet: specific limits, additional insured status, waivers, primary and noncontributory wording, and sometimes coverages you may not carry. We review the requirement before you sign.
Ready for terms? Get a quote. Want to find the gaps first? Compare your coverage.
What contracts commonly require
Typical requirements include general liability at set limits, additional insured status for the client, a waiver of subrogation, and primary and noncontributory language. Service contracts may also require professional liability, and some require cyber coverage.
These are specific endorsements and limits, so meeting them is a matter of policy detail, not just carrying insurance.
Where businesses get caught
The common issues are agreeing to limits above what you carry, missing endorsements, and committing to coverages you do not have. Once signed, you are obligated regardless of what your policy actually does.
A short review before signing prevents that gap.
How we help
Send us the insurance and indemnity language. We will compare it to your coverage, flag what is missing, and tell you what it takes to comply, including whether the requirement is reasonable for the work.
Common questions.
Can you review a client contract's insurance section?
What is primary and noncontributory?
What if a contract requires coverage I do not have?
Signing a client or vendor contract?
Send us the insurance language and we will tell you whether your coverage meets it before you commit.
Client and vendor contract insurance review.
Tell us what you are dealing with and we will give you a clear, no-obligation read and the right next step.