Business Insurance
Property and Liability Coverage, Packaged in One Policy
A Business Owners Policy gives Treasure Valley businesses a foundation of protection without the cost of buying every line separately.
A Business Owners Policy, or BOP, bundles two core coverages into a single policy: commercial property insurance and general liability insurance. Most small to midsize businesses benefit from this structure because it eliminates coverage gaps that can appear when property and liability are placed with different carriers on different terms. Bittick Insurance is an independent agency licensed in ID, CA, CO, NV, OR, TX, VA, and WA, so we shop the market to match you with the carrier and BOP structure that fits your operation, not just the one that's easiest to quote.
Your business faces more risks than you think.
From property damage and liability claims to employee disputes and cyber threats, we help you build a protection plan that covers what matters most.
What this coverage includes
Commercial property coverage
The property side of a BOP covers the physical assets your business depends on: your building or leased space, equipment, inventory, and furnishings. If a fire breaks out in your Meridian shop, a contractor backs a truck into your storefront, or a burst pipe soaks your back office over a long weekend, property coverage pays to repair or replace what was damaged. Many BOPs also include business income coverage, which replaces lost revenue during the time it takes to get operations back up and running after a covered loss.
General liability coverage
The liability side of a BOP protects your business when a third party claims you caused them bodily injury or property damage. A customer who slips on a wet floor in your lobby, a vendor whose laptop gets damaged when your employee knocks it off a table during a site visit, a passerby whose car gets dented by a falling sign from your building: these are the kinds of claims general liability is built for. It covers legal defense costs and any resulting settlement or judgment, up to your policy limits.
Business income and extra expense
Business income coverage (sometimes called business interruption coverage) kicks in when a covered property loss forces you to shut down or scale back operations. It replaces the revenue you would have earned during the restoration period. Extra expense coverage goes a step further, paying for costs above your normal operating expenses that you incur specifically to keep the business running while repairs are underway, such as renting temporary space or expediting equipment replacement.
What a standard BOP does not cover
A BOP is a strong foundation, but it is not a complete insurance program on its own. Professional liability (also called errors and omissions) is not included, so if a client claims your advice or professional service caused them financial harm, a BOP will not respond to that claim. Workers compensation, commercial auto, and employment practices liability are also separate lines. Depending on your industry and operations, you will likely need one or more of those alongside your BOP.
Pairs well with
Professional Liability (Errors and Omissions)
A BOP covers physical injury and property damage to third parties, but it does not cover claims that your professional advice or service caused a client financial harm. Professional liability fills that gap for consultants, designers, accountants, and any business that gets paid for expertise.
Learn more ›Workers Compensation Insurance
If you have employees, Idaho law requires workers compensation coverage. A BOP does not include it. Workers comp covers medical costs and lost wages when an employee is injured on the job.
Learn more ›Commercial Auto Insurance
Vehicles used for business purposes are not covered under a BOP's property section. If your team drives to job sites, makes deliveries, or hauls equipment, you need a separate commercial auto policy.
Learn more ›Cyber Liability Insurance
A standard BOP does not cover losses from a data breach or ransomware attack. If your business stores customer data, processes payments, or relies on connected systems, cyber liability is worth adding.
Learn more ›Commercial Umbrella Insurance
An umbrella policy sits above your BOP's liability limits and pays when a single claim exceeds them. For businesses with significant foot traffic, large contracts, or high-value client relationships, umbrella coverage adds an important buffer.
Learn more ›