Insurance by Industry
Insurance Built for Investment Advisory Firms
Managing other people's money is a high-responsibility role, and the right coverage protects your firm when things don't go according to plan.
Investment advisor insurance is a set of business coverages designed to protect registered investment advisors, wealth managers, and financial planning firms from the professional, cyber, and operational risks that come with managing client assets. A single client dispute, a data breach, or an auto accident on the way to a prospect meeting can trigger significant legal or financial exposure. Bittick works with multiple carriers to build a coverage program that fits the scale and structure of your firm, whether you run a solo RIA practice in Eagle or a multi-advisor office with staff. We're licensed in CA, CO, ID, NV, OR, TX, VA, and WA, including at our San Antonio office serving Hill Country-area advisors.
What this coverage includes
Professional Liability (Errors and Omissions)
Professional liability insurance, often called E&O, is the core coverage for any investment advisory firm. If a client claims your advice led to a financial loss, or that you mishandled their portfolio, they can sue regardless of whether the claim has merit. This coverage pays for your legal defense and any covered settlement or judgment. Defense costs alone in financial services disputes routinely run into five or six figures before a case is resolved. E&O does not eliminate liability, but it means a lawsuit does not have to come directly out of your firm's operating capital.
Cyber Liability
Advisory firms hold some of the most sensitive data that exists: Social Security numbers, account balances, tax returns, estate documents. That makes you a target. A cyber liability policy covers the costs of responding to a breach, including client notification, credit monitoring services, forensic investigation, regulatory response, and third-party claims from affected clients. It also covers business interruption if a ransomware attack takes your systems offline. Cyber coverage is not bundled into most standard business policies; it needs to be added separately and sized to the volume of client data your firm handles.
Business Owners Policy (BOP)
A business owners policy packages commercial property coverage with general liability insurance into one policy. Commercial property covers your physical office, equipment, and furnishings against fire, theft, or storm damage. General liability covers third-party bodily injury and property damage claims, such as a client who trips in your waiting area. For most advisory firms that lease office space, a BOP is the efficient starting point for business coverage before adding specialty lines on top of it.
Commercial and Non-Owned Auto
If advisors drive a firm-owned vehicle to client meetings, commercial auto insurance covers accidents, liability, and physical damage to that vehicle. If advisors drive their own personal vehicles on firm business, a hired and non-owned auto policy fills the gap that personal auto insurance typically excludes. Either way, a liability claim from an accident during a business errand falls outside standard personal auto coverage, so confirming how your team gets to client meetings matters when structuring this piece of a program.
Employment Practices and Crime Coverage
Employment practices liability insurance (EPLI) protects the firm against employee claims of discrimination, wrongful termination, harassment, or improper hiring decisions. These claims are independent of how well you manage client assets and can arrive at any firm size. Crime and fidelity coverage addresses a separate but related risk: employee dishonesty or theft of client financial information. Given that staff have routine access to account data and wire instructions, crime coverage is worth a specific conversation at any firm with more than one employee.
Pairs well with
Directors and Officers (D&O) Insurance
If your firm is structured as a corporation or LLC with a formal governance layer, D&O coverage protects individual officers and directors against claims tied to their management decisions, separate from the firm's E&O coverage.
Commercial Umbrella Insurance
An umbrella policy sits above your general liability, commercial auto, and employer's liability limits, extending coverage when a single large claim exhausts an underlying policy. Advisory firms with significant physical office presence or a larger staff benefit from this extra layer.
Learn more ›Workers Compensation Insurance
Idaho requires most employers to carry workers compensation for employees. If a staff member is injured at the office or while running a firm errand, this coverage handles medical costs and lost wages independently of your general liability policy.
Learn more ›Commercial Property Insurance
If your firm owns its building or carries significant server, AV, or office equipment outside of a BOP, a standalone commercial property policy can be sized to replacement value in a way that packaged policies sometimes cannot match.
Learn more ›Key Person Life Insurance
For smaller advisory firms where one or two principals hold the client relationships, key person life coverage gives the business the financial breathing room to transition clients and operations if a founding advisor dies unexpectedly.
What this coverage protects against
Common risks and how this coverage addresses them. Tap any scenario to expand.
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Client claims your rebalancing decision cost them six figures.
The risk
A longtime client retires, market conditions shift, and they decide the allocation strategy you recommended two years ago is responsible for their portfolio shortfall. They hire an attorney and file a formal complaint with FINRA before calling you directly.
How this coverage helps
Professional liability insurance covers your defense costs from the first demand letter through arbitration or settlement. You choose from your carrier's approved counsel, and the policy pays covered legal fees and any resulting award up to your policy limit, keeping the dispute from draining your firm's operating accounts.
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A phishing attack compromises client account credentials stored in your CRM.
The risk
One of your support staff clicks a convincing spoofed email, and attackers gain access to your client management system. Within hours, account numbers, Social Security data, and contact information for hundreds of clients are at risk. Idaho's breach notification law requires prompt disclosure.
How this coverage helps
Cyber liability coverage funds the forensic investigation to determine the breach scope, the legal guidance on state notification requirements, and the cost of sending client notifications and offering credit monitoring services. It also covers third-party claims from clients whose data was exposed.
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Your lead advisor causes an accident driving to a prospect in Meridian.
The risk
A senior advisor takes the firm's leased SUV across town to a new prospect meeting and rear-ends a pickup truck at a stoplight on Eagle Road. The other driver has medical bills and vehicle repair costs that exceed the advisor's personal auto limits.
How this coverage helps
Commercial auto insurance covers the liability to the other driver and the physical damage to the firm's vehicle. Without it, the firm would be exposed to the excess liability directly, and the leasing company's damage claim would come entirely out of pocket.
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A former employee files a discrimination claim after being let go.
The risk
You let go of a junior analyst during a restructure. Three months later, you receive a demand letter alleging the termination was discriminatory. The employee retained an employment attorney, and the initial demand covers back pay, damages, and attorney fees.
How this coverage helps
Employment practices liability insurance covers your legal defense and any covered settlement arising from the claim. The policy applies regardless of whether the claim has legal merit, which matters because defense costs in employment disputes often exceed the final settlement amount.
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A client visiting your Eagle office sprains an ankle on a wet lobby floor.
The risk
An afternoon rainstorm tracks water into your office entrance. A client arrives for a quarterly review meeting, slips on the tile, and fractures her wrist in the fall. She incurs emergency room costs and misses two weeks of work.
How this coverage helps
The general liability portion of your business owners policy covers the client's medical expenses and any resulting bodily injury claim against the firm. This is the kind of incident that has nothing to do with investment performance but can still produce a significant liability exposure for any office that receives visitors.
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An operations employee transfers client funds to a fraudulent account.
The risk
A trusted back-office employee intercepts wire transfer instructions for a large client distribution and routes the funds to a personal account over several weeks before the discrepancy surfaces during an annual reconciliation.
How this coverage helps
A crime or fidelity coverage policy covers employee dishonesty losses like this one, up to the policy limit. It is specifically designed for the internal theft risk that general liability and E&O policies do not address, and it matters most at firms where staff members have routine access to client account movement instructions.
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A third-party data vendor breach exposes client records your firm shared.
The risk
Your firm uses a cloud-based portfolio reporting platform. The vendor suffers a breach, and client data your firm uploaded is among the compromised records. Even though the breach originated at the vendor, your clients hold your firm responsible for sharing their information.
How this coverage helps
Cyber liability coverage responds to third-party data breach claims even when the breach source is a vendor, provided your policy's scope includes network security liability. Reviewing that scope at bind time, rather than after a claim, is one of the most practical things Bittick does when placing cyber coverage for advisory clients.