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A major risk area every business owner should know about

June 29, 2026
Ground Picture // Shutterstock

A major risk area every business owner should know about

As a small business owner, did you know that you could be held liable for bodily injury or property damage resulting from your operations or products, even if the injury or damage occurs after the work is long done and your policy has expired? And if the damage happens after you have cancelled your insurance, you may not have coverage for the incident, even though it results from operations you performed or products you sold during your policy term.

How can you protect yourself if you go out of business or don’t renew your general liability policy, if a claim related to work you previously completed comes your way? Below, Thimble shares what you need to know.

There are two types of exposures:

  1. A premises/operations exposure
  2. A products and completed operations exposure

The former includes risks associated within the physical location of your business or job site while your operations are taking place. The latter exposure type focuses on the risks associated with your operations, products or services once they have been sold or completed. Premises/operations incidents usually occur during the policy period, so typically the damage arising from them does, too. But when it comes to incidents that arise from your products or completed operations, an injury or damage could occur months after a policy expires.

Once a product has left your hands or a project is completed, if something arises after that, it is considered a product and completed operations loss, exposing your small business to major liability. And as a small business owner, preparing yourself for these types of scenarios — or at least understanding what your policies cover and don’t cover — is critical.

Most policies that small businesses purchase are known as “occurrence” policies. This means you must have a policy in force when the damage or injury occurs, irrespective of when the work was done.

Consider a hypothetical scenario where this type of coverage comes into play. Let’s say a contractor in Florida named Bob is hired to build a patio deck. Bob purchases insurance for a policy term that matches the duration of the project. Six months after the project is completed and the insurance policy expires, a grandma falls and breaks her arm when the railing fails. Bob is still liable for the bodily injury claim, even though the insurance he purchased was no longer in force. Because the policy he purchased only covered injury or damage which happened during the policy term, Bob panics. Is he going to be covered under his old, expired general liability policy?

Just as personal injury is a type of coverage under a general liability policy, products and completed operations is a coverage type small business owners should look for to help protect against scenarios like these — especially if they are purchasing a short-term policy. If Bob the contractor has product and operations coverage that extends through when the porch railing accident occurs, he’ll have coverage.

Many small business owners don’t know to look for this type of coverage, or what it really means, making this a major risk area to consider.

How can you be sure you’re getting this coverage?

A small business owner should review for products and operations coverage in their general liability policy. More specifically, policy holders should review what is included during the policy term, and under which conditions. Not all policies are created equal, so checking to ensure you have continued products and completed operation coverage for critical periods is crucial. For more personalized insurance advice, find and consult with a licensed insurance broker near you.

This story was produced by Thimble and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.


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