Insurance by Industry
Coverage for the people who cover everyone else
Insurance agents carry real professional and business risk, and Bittick can help you find coverage that fits how your agency actually operates.
Insurance agent insurance is a collection of policies that protects an agency's professional work, physical office, employees, and client data from the liability and property risks that come with running an insurance business. Agents give advice, place coverage, and handle sensitive client information every day, and a single mistake or data incident can trigger a lawsuit that an uninsured agency would have to absorb on its own. At Bittick, we are independent agents ourselves, so we understand exactly what your operation looks like from the inside. We work with multiple carriers to find coverage that fits agencies of all sizes, from solo producers to multi-line shops across Idaho, Texas, and the other states where we're licensed: CA, CO, NV, OR, VA, and WA.
What this coverage includes
Errors and omissions (E&O) liability
E&O insurance, sometimes called professional liability, is the cornerstone of any insurance agent's coverage program. It responds when a client claims your professional advice or an administrative error caused them a financial loss. That includes situations where a policy was quoted or explained incorrectly, a renewal lapsed because paperwork was not submitted in time, or a client believed they had coverage they did not actually have. E&O pays for defense costs and any resulting settlement or judgment, which can easily reach into six figures even when the agent did nothing intentionally wrong.
General liability for your office
General liability covers third-party bodily injury and property damage that happens in connection with your business premises or operations. If a client visits your Eagle office and trips on a loose threshold strip, or if an employee accidentally damages a client's property during an off-site meeting, general liability addresses those claims. It also covers personal and advertising injury, such as an allegation that your marketing materials defamed a competitor. For agencies that receive clients in person, this coverage is not optional.
Business owners policy (BOP)
A BOP bundles general liability with commercial property coverage into one policy, typically at a lower combined premium than buying each separately. Commercial property covers your office furniture, computers, filing systems, and any other physical assets you own or lease for business use. A BOP works for agencies at any scale, from a one-person shop in a leased suite to a multi-producer office in a commercial building. It is usually the foundation that other coverages build around.
Cyber liability
Your agency holds names, addresses, dates of birth, social security numbers, and financial information for every client in your book of business. A data breach, ransomware event, or accidental exposure of that data creates notification obligations, regulatory exposure, and potential lawsuits. Cyber liability insurance covers breach response costs, client notification expenses, legal defense, and losses tied to network interruptions. As agencies move more operations to cloud-based agency management systems, cyber exposure has grown significantly even for small shops.
Workers' compensation and commercial auto
If you have employees, Idaho law requires workers' compensation coverage, and the same applies in most other states where you operate. Workers' comp pays for medical treatment and lost wages when an employee is injured on the job, whether that is a repetitive strain injury from desk work or something more acute. Commercial auto, or a hired-and-non-owned auto endorsement, covers liability when employees use their personal vehicles to meet clients or run agency errands. Personal auto policies exclude business use, so the gap is real and worth closing.
Pairs well with
Errors and Omissions (E&O) Insurance
E&O is the most critical standalone policy for any insurance agent. It specifically covers professional mistakes, missed renewals, and coverage misrepresentation claims that a BOP's general liability section does not address.
Learn more ›Cyber Liability Insurance
Agencies store sensitive personal and financial data for every client they serve. Cyber liability covers breach response, client notification, and legal costs when that data is compromised.
Learn more ›Business Owners Policy (BOP)
A BOP gives smaller agencies an efficient way to cover both their general liability exposure and their physical office assets under one policy at a bundled rate.
Learn more ›Workers' Compensation Insurance
Idaho requires workers' comp for any agency with employees. It covers medical costs and wage replacement when a staff member is injured on the job, protecting both the employee and the agency.
Learn more ›Commercial Auto / Hired and Non-Owned Auto
When employees use personal vehicles for agency business, their personal auto policies will not cover business-related accidents. A commercial auto policy or hired-and-non-owned endorsement closes that gap.
Learn more ›What this coverage protects against
Common risks and how this coverage addresses them. Tap any scenario to expand.
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An overlooked renewal leaves a client uninsured at the worst moment.
The risk
A producer at a busy agency misses a carrier deadline during a high-renewal-volume month. The client's policy lapses without anyone catching it, and two weeks later the client files a claim, only to find out they have no coverage. The client holds the agency responsible for the gap.
How this coverage helps
E&O insurance responds to this kind of professional error. It covers the agency's legal defense costs and any settlement or judgment, so one administrative oversight does not threaten the agency's financial stability.
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A coverage explanation leads to a denied claim and a lawsuit.
The risk
An agent walks a small business owner through a commercial property policy and mentions, in passing, that flood damage is included. It is not, and the client does not read the exclusions closely. After a loss, the carrier denies the claim and the business owner sues the agency for the full amount.
How this coverage helps
E&O coverage is designed for exactly this scenario. It pays for the attorney fees to defend the agency and, if the agency is found liable, covers the resulting judgment up to the policy limit.
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A client visits the office and gets hurt on the way in.
The risk
A longtime client comes in to review their annual renewal. The parking lot has a cracked section of pavement, and the client catches their foot on it, falls, and fractures a wrist. They require surgery and miss several weeks of work.
How this coverage helps
General liability coverage handles bodily injury claims like this. It covers the client's medical costs and any legal action, so the agency is not paying a personal injury settlement out of its operating account.
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Ransomware locks down the agency's management system.
The risk
An employee opens a phishing email that installs ransomware on the agency network. The system that holds every client's policy information, contact details, and financial data is encrypted and inaccessible. The attacker demands payment, and state law requires the agency to notify affected clients.
How this coverage helps
Cyber liability insurance covers the cost of a forensic investigation, mandatory client notification, regulatory response support, and business interruption losses while the system is restored. It also responds to any lawsuits clients file over the exposure of their personal information.
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An employee is rear-ended while driving to a client's business.
The risk
A commercial lines account manager drives her own car to a manufacturing client's facility in Nampa for an annual review meeting. On the way back, she is rear-ended at an I-84 on-ramp and injured. Her personal auto insurer confirms the trip was business use and excludes the claim.
How this coverage helps
A hired-and-non-owned auto endorsement on the agency's commercial policy fills the business-use gap. It covers the agency's liability and can coordinate with the employee's personal coverage for the portion of damages that exceed those limits.
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A fire damages the agency's office equipment and forces a temporary closure.
The risk
An electrical issue in the building causes a fire that destroys the agency's workstations, monitors, printers, and filing cabinets. The office has to close for several weeks while repairs are made and equipment is replaced.
How this coverage helps
The commercial property portion of a BOP covers the cost to replace the damaged equipment. Business income coverage, which can be added to a BOP, reimburses the agency for revenue lost during the period the office cannot operate.
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A data entry mistake puts an incorrect driver on a client's auto policy.
The risk
During a policy change, an agent accidentally lists the wrong household member as the primary driver. The rating discrepancy goes unnoticed until the client has an at-fault accident and the carrier investigates. The policy is rescinded for material misrepresentation, leaving the client exposed, and they blame the agent.
How this coverage helps
E&O insurance covers the agency when a clerical or processing error contributes to a client's loss. Defense costs and any covered damages both fall within the policy, provided the error was unintentional.