Most small businesses pay $60β$200 per month for business insurance, but the number on your quote depends almost entirely on what type of work you do. This guide breaks down every major policy type, what you truly need vs. what you can skip, why contractors pay triple what consultants do, and how to stop overpaying at renewal.
Business insurance exists for one reason: a single lawsuit, accident, or fire can wipe out a business that took years to build. A customer slipping on your floor. A client claiming your advice cost them money. A work vehicle hitting another car. Without insurance, each of those scenarios means paying a lawyer and a settlement out of your business account β or your personal savings. The average cost of a general liability lawsuit defense alone runs $75,000 to $150,000 regardless of whether you win, according to industry data. A typical general liability policy that covers the same exposure costs roughly $42β$123 per month. Viewed that way, business insurance is one of the least expensive risk-management decisions a small business owner makes β the math works strongly in favor of coverage.
Business insurance pricing is more predictable than most owners realize. Once you understand the seven or eight factors that drive your premium, the quotes you receive will make sense β and you’ll know when one is too high.
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How much does small business insurance cost per month? $42β$123/mo for general liability alone Β· $57β$221/mo for a Business Owner’s Policy (BOP) Β· $54β$70/mo for workers’ comp Β· Most small businesses budget $100β$200/mo total for core coverageThe range is wide because “small business insurance” isn’t a single policy β it’s a combination of coverages tailored to what your business actually does. A solo bookkeeper working from home might pay $42/month for a bare-minimum general liability policy and nothing else. A five-person landscaping company likely needs general liability, workers’ compensation, and commercial auto β running $400β$600/month combined. The most useful starting benchmark: a small business with one to four employees and a clean claims history pays an average of $123/month for general liability at $1 million per occurrence. Add a Business Owner’s Policy (which bundles property and liability together) and the average climbs to roughly $147β$221/month depending on your industry and location. These are national averages β your specific number will shift based on your state, your industry risk class, and your revenue.
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How much does business insurance cost per year? General liability: ~$500β$1,474/year Β· BOP (bundled policy): $684β$2,652/year Β· Cyber insurance: ~$1,740/year Β· Full coverage stack for most small businesses: $1,200β$4,800/year depending on industry and sizeAnnual premiums are what most insurers quote first, though monthly payment options are widely available (sometimes with a small installment fee). General liability at the national average runs about $1,474/year for a small business with one to four employees. A Business Owner’s Policy β the bundle that most advisors recommend over standalone general liability β runs $684β$2,652/year depending on your industry and how much property you’re insuring. Cyber insurance, which is increasingly relevant as even small businesses handle customer data and payment information, averages $1,740/year for a basic policy. Paying annually almost always saves 5β10% compared to monthly installments, which is worth doing if your cash flow allows it. Some carriers also offer a mid-term audit that adjusts your premium if your payroll or revenue drops significantly during the policy year.
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How much does business insurance cost for a self-employed person? Self-employed / sole proprietor: $19β$65/mo for general liability Β· $37/mo average for professional liability (E&O) Β· Workers’ comp optional but recommended for physical trades Β· Solo consultants often pay under $100/mo totalSelf-employed individuals and sole proprietors typically need less insurance than businesses with employees β and pay proportionally less. A freelance graphic designer, bookkeeper, or marketing consultant can often cover their essential liability exposure for $37β$65/month. The two policies most relevant to the self-employed are general liability (protects against third-party injury or property damage claims β relevant if you ever work at a client’s location) and professional liability, also called Errors and Omissions (E&O) insurance, which protects against claims that your work or advice caused a financial loss. Insurers like Next, biBERK, and Simply Business offer online quotes in minutes for self-employed workers and commonly issue a Certificate of Insurance (COI) the same day β which many clients and property managers require before starting work. Workers’ compensation is generally optional for sole proprietors without employees in most states, though it’s worth having if you do physical work where injury could sideline your income.
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What is a Business Owner’s Policy (BOP) and is it worth it? BOP = general liability + commercial property + business interruption bundled together Β· Costs $52β$221/mo Β· Almost always cheaper than buying each policy separately Β· Best choice for most small businesses with a physical location or equipmentA Business Owner’s Policy is the insurance industry’s version of a bundle deal. Instead of buying general liability, commercial property, and business interruption coverage as three separate policies from three separate invoices, a BOP combines all three into a single monthly payment β typically at a lower combined price than buying them individually. The business interruption component is often overlooked but genuinely valuable: if a fire, flood, or major storm forces you to close temporarily, business interruption coverage pays your ongoing expenses (rent, payroll, utilities) and replaces lost revenue while you’re shut down. For a small business with physical space, equipment, inventory, or a consistent customer flow, a BOP is almost always the smarter starting point compared to standalone general liability. The average BOP premium of $57/month from Simply Business or $52/month from The Hartford represents one of the best value-to-coverage ratios in commercial insurance.
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How much is business insurance for a lawn care company? General liability: $75β$150/mo Β· Workers’ comp (if employees): $100β$200/mo Β· Commercial auto for truck and trailer: $150β$250/mo Β· Total for a small crew: $400β$700/mo Β· Higher than average because of outdoor physical work and equipment hazardsLawn care is a mid-to-high risk industry from an insurer’s perspective: employees operate machinery and power equipment, work on private property where accidents can happen, drive trucks that pull trailers, and frequently encounter situations where property damage is possible (broken windows from mowing debris, damaged irrigation systems, chemicals applied to the wrong area). General liability for a small lawn care operation runs $75β$150/month depending on your annual revenue and crew size. Workers’ compensation is almost always legally required once you have employees, and the premium is calculated from payroll β typically $2β$5 per $100 of payroll for landscaping work. A single employee at $40,000 annual pay generates $800β$2,000 in annual workers’ comp premium ($67β$167/month). Combine the full stack of policies a legitimate lawn care company needs and the monthly total typically lands between $400 and $700 for a small operation of two to five people.
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How much is commercial auto insurance per month? Average: $147/mo (national median) Β· Range: $80β$350/mo depending on vehicles, drivers, and industry Β· Commercial auto is NOT covered by personal auto policies β using your personal car for business can void your coverageCommercial auto insurance covers vehicles used for business purposes β delivery trucks, work vans, company cars, and vehicles driven by employees on the job. The national average runs about $147/month per vehicle, but the range is enormous: a single sedan used by a consultant to drive to client meetings might run $80β$100/month, while a commercial truck used in construction or hauling can run $300β$600/month. The most important thing owners get wrong: personal auto insurance explicitly excludes business use in most policies. If you drive your personal vehicle for business purposes β deliveries, client visits, transporting tools or equipment β and you have an accident, your personal insurance carrier has the right to deny the claim because the vehicle was in commercial use. This is true even if your personal policy is active and paid up. Any vehicle used regularly for business activity needs a commercial auto policy β period.
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What factors make business insurance cost more or less? Industry risk class (biggest factor) Β· Annual revenue and payroll Β· Number of employees Β· Location and state regulations Β· Claims history Β· Coverage limits and deductibles Β· Years in businessYour industry risk class is by far the largest single driver of your premium. A software consultant and a roofing contractor can both buy a $1 million general liability policy, but the roofer pays $300β$400/month while the consultant pays $40β$60/month β for identical coverage limits. That difference exists because the statistical likelihood of a claim in roofing is dramatically higher. Beyond industry: annual revenue and payroll drive premium because higher revenue means more exposure. Location matters because states with more active plaintiff bars, higher wages, and stricter regulations produce more expensive claims β California, New York, and Florida regularly produce the highest commercial premiums. Your claims history has a compounding effect: a single significant claim can increase your premium by 20β50% at renewal and follow you for three to five years. And the deductible you choose works the same way it does in personal insurance β higher deductible, lower monthly premium, more out-of-pocket when you file a claim.
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What’s the cheapest business insurance β and what does it actually cover? Cheapest starting point: general liability from online carriers like Next or biBERK, starting at $19β$25/mo for low-risk businesses Β· Cheap β bad β for solo consultants and very low-risk work, a $25β$40/mo policy is genuinely adequate Β· Never choose based on price alone without checking coverage limitsOnline-first insurers like Next Insurance and biBERK (backed by Berkshire Hathaway) have made cheap, instant business insurance genuinely accessible. Both advertise general liability starting around $19β$25/month for low-risk businesses, issue Certificates of Insurance (COIs) instantly online, and allow you to add additional insured parties β like a client or property manager β from a phone. For a freelance photographer, a virtual assistant, a part-time yoga instructor, or a home-based craftsperson with no employees and minimal property exposure, this kind of policy is honestly appropriate for the risk level. The key warning: “cheap” at a low coverage limit ($300,000 or $500,000 per occurrence) may not be adequate if your client requires $1 million in coverage, which is standard for commercial clients and most property managers. Always read the declarations page before buying β the headline price is for a specific limit, and upgrading to $1 million/$2 million (the commercial standard) will cost more.
Premiums shown are national averages for small businesses with one to four employees and no prior claims. Actual quotes vary by industry, state, and revenue. Use these as a planning baseline β not a guarantee.
| Policy Type | Average Monthly Cost | What It Covers | Who Needs It |
|---|---|---|---|
| General Liability Start Here | $42β$123/mo~$500β$1,474/year | Customer injuries, property damage, advertising injury claims | Every business that interacts with the public, clients, or vendors |
| Business Owner’s Policy (BOP) | $52β$221/mo~$624β$2,652/year | GL + commercial property + business interruption bundled | Best value for businesses with a physical location, equipment, or inventory |
| Professional Liability (E&O) | $37β$80/moavg $37/mo for consultants | Claims your advice, service, or work caused a financial loss to a client | Consultants, accountants, designers, IT professionals, real estate agents |
| Workers’ Compensation | $45β$99/moPer employee; varies by industry payroll | Employee medical bills, lost wages, disability from work injuries | Required in most states the moment you hire any employee (full or part-time) |
| Commercial Auto | $80β$245/moPer vehicle; higher for trucks | Vehicle damage, liability, medical costs from business-use accidents | Any business using vehicles for deliveries, client visits, or employee transport |
| Cyber Insurance | $100β$200/mo~$1,740/year average | Data breaches, ransomware, customer notification costs, legal fees | Businesses that store customer data, take online payments, or use cloud tools |
| Commercial Property | $67/mo avgHigher in disaster-prone areas | Buildings, equipment, inventory damage from fire, storm, theft | Businesses with valuable physical assets (usually included in BOP) |
| Umbrella / Excess Liability | $40β$75/moAdds $1Mβ$5M on top of base coverage | Covers claims exceeding your primary policy limits | Businesses with high public exposure, large contracts, or significant assets |
Workers’ compensation is required in every state once you hire employees, but the threshold varies. Most states require coverage with your first hire. Four states β Ohio, North Dakota, Washington, and Wyoming β require you to purchase workers’ comp from a state fund rather than a private insurer. California, New York, Florida, and Texas have their own specific rules around exemptions and contractor classification. Check your state’s department of labor website before assuming you’re compliant β penalties for non-compliance include fines, back premiums, and personal liability for employee injury costs.
Use the buttons below to find licensed independent insurance brokers, the Small Business Administration (SBA) offices, your state’s workers’ comp resources, and small business advisors near you. An independent broker shops multiple carriers simultaneously and typically finds lower rates than going direct to a single insurer.
- Step 1: Identify what risks actually apply to your business β customer injury, property damage, professional errors, vehicle accidents, employee injuries, or data breaches. Not every business needs every policy type.
- Step 2: Know your state’s workers’ compensation requirements before hiring anyone. Most states require it with your first employee (full or part-time). Four states require purchase from a state fund, not a private insurer.
- Step 3: Get at least three quotes from different sources β one direct carrier online (Next, biBERK, Hiscox), one independent broker, and one marketplace (Insureon, Simply Business). The spread between quotes often exceeds 30%.
- Step 4: Verify the class code used in your quote matches your actual primary work. Misclassification β even accidental β can result in a premium that’s too high or coverage that’s disputed at claim time.
- Step 5: Check your coverage limits against what clients, landlords, and contractors actually require. The commercial standard is $1 million per occurrence / $2 million aggregate for general liability. Low-limit cheap policies often don’t meet contract requirements.
- Step 6: Set a renewal review date β not just an auto-renew date. Shop your coverage every year at renewal. Market conditions have improved for clean-history businesses, and auto-renewing without comparison is one of the most reliable ways to overpay.
Business insurance premiums shown reflect current national averages and may vary significantly based on your industry, state, annual revenue, number of employees, claims history, and chosen coverage limits. Average cost data draws from multiple aggregated industry reports and carrier data. This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute insurance advice. Always work with a licensed insurance professional to determine the right coverage for your specific business. This page has no affiliation with any insurance carrier, broker, or financial institution.