Furrier and garment dealer insurance is a package of commercial coverages designed to protect businesses that buy, sell, store, or transport high-value textiles, furs, and designer goods. Your inventory is the business. A single fire, water event, or theft incident can wipe out more value than most standard commercial policies are built to handle. Bittick works with carriers that understand specialty retail and can structure limits and coverage types around what you actually stock and how you operate. We place coverage for clients across Idaho, Texas, and six other states, all as an independent agency with no obligation to any one carrier.

What this coverage includes

Commercial property for your inventory and premises

Commercial property insurance covers your physical business assets against losses from fire, water damage, vandalism, and similar events. For furriers and garment dealers, the stakes are higher than average because textiles and furs are flammable, water-sensitive, and expensive to replace. A good commercial property policy sets limits that actually reflect the replacement cost of your stock, not a generic square-footage estimate. If your inventory value fluctuates seasonally, you may need a policy with a reporting form or peak-season endorsement so your limits keep pace with what's on the floor.

Crime coverage for theft, fraud, and forgery

Crime insurance addresses gaps that commercial property policies often leave open. Furs, silks, and designer labels attract theft, but the risk does not stop at the front door. Fraudulent payment instruments and counterfeit designer goods are real exposures in this industry. Crime coverage can protect your business assets when a loss involves deception rather than a broken window. It pairs directly with your commercial property policy to close the coverage gap between a straightforward burglary claim and a more complex fraud situation.

Inland marine for goods in transit

Inland marine insurance covers property while it is moving between locations, something a standard commercial property policy generally does not do. If you are hauling inventory from a warehouse to your storefront, delivering a fur coat to a customer, or staging garments at a local fashion show, that merchandise is exposed the moment it leaves your premises. Inland marine fills that gap by covering theft, damage, and loss during transport. The name is a historical oddity, but the protection is practical and relevant any time your goods are on the move.

General liability for customer and third-party claims

General liability insurance covers bodily injury and property damage claims that arise from your business operations. If a customer slips in your showroom, or your employee damages a client's vehicle while delivering an order, general liability is the coverage that responds. For specialty retail, this is a foundational policy, not optional. A Business Owners Policy, or BOP, bundles general liability with commercial property into one policy form, which is often a cost-efficient starting point for smaller garment dealers and boutique fur salons.

Cyber liability for digital business operations

If you process credit cards, maintain customer data, or run any portion of your business online, a data breach or system compromise can create real financial losses. Cyber liability insurance covers the costs that follow a breach: notification, credit monitoring for affected customers, regulatory response, and potential legal defense. For garment dealers selling through e-commerce platforms or storing designer client profiles, this coverage addresses a risk that has nothing to do with your inventory but everything to do with your bottom line.

Pairs well with

Business Owners Policy (BOP)

A BOP combines commercial property and general liability into one policy, which is often the most efficient starting structure for boutique retailers and fur salons. It gives you the two foundational coverages without managing separate policy renewals.

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Commercial Auto Insurance

If you or your employees use vehicles to deliver orders, pick up inventory, or transport goods to events, personal auto policies will not cover those trips. Commercial auto closes that gap.

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Workers Compensation Insurance

Any garment dealer or fur salon with employees needs workers compensation. In Idaho, most employers are required to carry it, and it covers medical costs and lost wages when an employee is injured on the job.

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Umbrella Insurance

High-value inventory and high-ticket sales create above-average liability exposure. A commercial umbrella policy extends your underlying liability limits when a single claim exceeds what your base policy will pay.

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Cyber Liability Insurance

Garment dealers processing online orders or storing customer data need dedicated cyber coverage. A standard commercial property or BOP policy does not cover losses from a data breach or ransomware event.

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What this coverage protects against

Common risks and how this coverage addresses them. Tap any scenario to expand.

  • Fire breaks out in your storage room overnight.

    The risk

    A short in an outlet ignites fabric bolts stored in your back room. By morning, a significant portion of your fur and designer garment inventory is gone. Standard replacement cost for a high-end fur inventory can reach six figures before you factor in the showroom itself.

    How this coverage helps

    Commercial property insurance with limits set to reflect your actual inventory value covers the loss and helps fund the replacement stock you need to reopen. Getting limits right before a fire, not after, is the work Bittick does up front.

  • Thieves target your showroom after hours.

    The risk

    Furs and designer goods attract professional theft. A coordinated break-in after closing can clear a showroom display in minutes. The dollar value of a single rack of inventory often exceeds what basic property theft sublimits will pay.

    How this coverage helps

    A commercial property policy with adequate theft coverage, supplemented by a crime insurance endorsement, covers the stolen goods up to the policy limit. Crime coverage can also address situations where the theft involved an inside actor or a fraudulent transaction rather than a forced entry.

  • Inventory is stolen from your vehicle on the way to a fashion event.

    The risk

    You loaded garments into your SUV to display at a local runway event and parked in a loading zone. When you returned, the vehicle was broken into and several pieces were taken. The items were not on your business premises when the loss occurred.

    How this coverage helps

    Inland marine insurance covers the merchandise in transit, filling the gap your commercial property policy leaves once goods leave the building. The claim goes to the inland marine carrier, and your retail operations are not disrupted.

  • A customer pays with a fraudulent instrument on a large order.

    The risk

    A buyer places a sizable order for designer goods and pays with a check that later bounces, or with a stolen credit card that gets charged back after delivery. By the time the fraud surfaces, the merchandise is gone and so is the money.

    How this coverage helps

    Crime insurance covers financial losses from fraud, forgery, and deceptive payment instruments. It provides a recovery path when the theft was transactional rather than physical, something a standard property policy does not address.

  • A customer slips and falls in your showroom.

    The risk

    A client visits your showroom during a rainy afternoon. Water tracked in from outside creates a slick spot near the entrance. The customer falls, injures a knee, and files a claim against your business for medical costs and lost wages.

    How this coverage helps

    General liability insurance covers bodily injury claims that arise from your business premises and operations. It pays for the customer's medical expenses and, if the situation escalates to a lawsuit, covers your legal defense costs up to the policy limit.

  • A water pipe bursts above your storage area.

    The risk

    An older pipe in the ceiling of your back stockroom fails over a holiday weekend. By the time anyone notices Monday morning, standing water has soaked through boxes of seasonal inventory. Silk, cashmere, and fur do not recover from prolonged water exposure.

    How this coverage helps

    Commercial property insurance covers water damage from internal pipe failures and helps pay for both the damaged inventory and any structural repair needed to the space. Documenting inventory value with your agent before a loss makes the claims process faster and the settlement more accurate.

  • A data breach exposes your online customers' payment information.

    The risk

    You sell through an e-commerce platform and store customer profiles for repeat orders. A breach exposes credit card data for hundreds of customers. You are now responsible for breach notification, credit monitoring services, and potential regulatory inquiry.

    How this coverage helps

    Cyber liability insurance covers the direct costs of responding to a breach: legal counsel, notification, credit monitoring, and regulatory defense. It protects the business from financial losses that have nothing to do with your inventory but can be just as damaging to your bottom line.

Frequently asked questions

How much does insurance cost for a furrier or garment dealer in Idaho?
Cost depends on several factors: the value of your inventory, your annual revenue, your location, and your claims history. A small boutique garment shop and a high-volume fur salon will have meaningfully different premiums. Because Bittick is independent, we can gather quotes from multiple carriers and show you how the numbers compare before you commit to anything.
Does a standard Business Owners Policy cover my fur inventory at full value?
Not always. Many BOP policies include sublimits on specific categories of high-value personal property, and furs often fall into those capped categories. You may need a separate inland marine or scheduled property endorsement to cover your inventory at actual replacement cost. We review those sublimits as part of the quoting process so you know exactly what the policy will pay.
What does inland marine insurance actually cover for a garment dealer?
Inland marine covers your merchandise while it is away from your fixed business location: in a delivery vehicle, at a consignment location, on display at a trade show, or being transported between a warehouse and your storefront. Once goods leave the premises, your commercial property policy generally stops applying, and inland marine picks up. The name sounds like it has nothing to do with clothing, but it is the standard coverage form for property in transit.
Do I need crime insurance if I already have commercial property coverage?
Commercial property policies cover theft, but they often have sublimits and exclusions that leave gaps, particularly around employee dishonesty, fraud, and forgery. Crime insurance is a separate policy form that addresses those exposures directly. For a furrier or garment dealer dealing in high-value designer goods, where fraud risk is real, crime coverage is worth a serious look.
Can Bittick help garment dealers outside of Idaho?
Yes. Bittick is licensed in CA, CO, ID, NV, OR, TX, VA, and WA. Our San Antonio office serves garment and specialty retailers across Texas, and we handle clients in the other licensed states from our Eagle, Idaho headquarters. The process is the same wherever you are: we shop your coverage, explain the options, and place the policy that makes sense for your business.
What information do I need to get a quote for garment dealer insurance?
Start with your approximate inventory value (peak and average), your annual revenue, your business address and square footage, and a basic description of how you sell (retail storefront, e-commerce, wholesale, or some combination). The more accurately you can describe your inventory value and operations, the more useful the quotes will be. We will ask the right follow-up questions once we hear the basics.

Get a quote for your fur salon or garment business

Tell us about your inventory and operations, and we will come back with coverage options from carriers that actually understand specialty retail.

Don't like forms? Contact us at 208-609-3511 or email us.