Business Insurance
Cyber Liability Insurance for Your Business
A data breach or ransomware attack can cost far more than the cleanup — this coverage addresses the full financial impact.
Cyber liability insurance is a business policy that covers the financial losses your company faces when a data breach, ransomware attack, or other cyber incident exposes client information or knocks your systems offline. For any Treasure Valley business that stores customer data, processes payments, or runs operations through networked software, a single intrusion can generate legal costs, regulatory notices, and lost revenue simultaneously. Bittick shops this coverage across multiple carriers to match limits and terms to how your business actually operates — whether you're a Meridian medical office, a Nampa manufacturer, or a professional services firm in Boise.
Your business runs on data—and data breaches can shut you down.
Cyber liability insurance protects you from the financial and legal fallout of a hack, breach, or attack—and we'll help you pick the coverage that matches your real risk.
What this coverage includes
Data breach response costs
When a breach exposes personal or financial data, your business is legally required to notify affected individuals and, depending on the data type, regulatory agencies. Cyber liability coverage pays for those notifications, the forensic investigation to determine what was taken and how, credit monitoring services for affected customers, and public relations support to protect your reputation. These costs add up quickly even on a small breach involving a few hundred records.
Business interruption from a cyber event
If an attack takes your systems offline — ransomware locking your files, a denial-of-service flood crashing your site, or a compromised vendor disrupting your supply chain — your revenue stops while the problem gets resolved. Cyber business interruption coverage replaces lost income during the outage, similar to how a standard property policy handles fire-related downtime, except it applies specifically to network or system failures caused by a malicious act.
Extortion and ransomware payments
Ransomware attackers encrypt your data and demand payment to restore access. Some policies cover negotiated ransom payments and the costs of a professional crisis-response firm that handles the negotiation. This isn't a coverage you want to discover you're missing at 2 a.m. when your point-of-sale system is locked and a deadline is ticking.
Third-party liability from a breach
If your breach exposes a client's data or infects a partner's systems, they may hold you responsible. Third-party cyber liability covers legal defense costs, settlements, and damages awarded to other businesses or individuals harmed by a breach that originated on your network. It can also cover situations where your business inadvertently reproduces copyrighted material or content through automated digital processes.
Pre-breach risk assessment support
Some carriers that write cyber liability policies include risk-assessment tools as part of the relationship — reviewing your current security posture and flagging gaps before a loss occurs. This isn't a substitute for a dedicated IT security consultant, but it gives small and mid-size businesses a starting framework for identifying the weakest points in their defenses.
Pairs well with
Commercial General Liability
General liability covers bodily injury and property damage claims but excludes data and network-related losses. Cyber liability fills that gap so neither policy leaves an overlap or a blind spot.
Learn more ›Errors and Omissions (E&O) Insurance
Professional services firms often face claims that blend a service failure with a data exposure. E&O and cyber liability work together to cover the professional negligence angle and the data breach angle separately.
Learn more ›Commercial Property Insurance
Commercial property covers physical hardware damaged in a fire or theft, but it does not cover the data or income loss from a cyberattack on that same equipment. Pairing the two closes that gap.
Learn more ›Business Owner's Policy (BOP)
A BOP bundles property and liability for small businesses, but cyber coverage is almost never included by default. Adding a standalone cyber policy alongside a BOP is a common structure for small Treasure Valley businesses.
Learn more ›Employment Practices Liability (EPLI)
A breach that exposes employee personnel records or payroll data can generate employment-related claims alongside the standard data breach costs. EPLI covers the employment side of that overlap.
Learn more ›