Non-profit insurance is a bundle of commercial coverages designed to protect charitable and tax-exempt organizations from the same liability, property, and employment risks that any business faces. Your organization's goal is to serve others, but the legal and financial exposures don't disappear because your balance sheet is different. A volunteer-run food pantry in Nampa and a Boise-based advocacy group with a paid staff of thirty face different risks, but both need a deliberate policy structure. Bittick is an independent agency, so we shop your coverage across multiple carriers and put together a package that matches your size, your staff mix, and the work you actually do.

Your non-profit faces unique liability and operational risks that standard business insurance won't cover.

We help you build a protection plan that keeps your mission and your leaders safe.

Illustrated scene depicting the risks Non Profit Insurance protects against, with hotspot markers highlighting each scenario.

The risk

How this coverage helps

What this coverage includes

Directors and Officers Liability

Directors and officers (D&O) liability insurance covers the people who govern your organization. If a board member makes a financial decision that goes sideways, or a donor or creditor alleges mismanagement, a lawsuit can name the individual board members personally alongside the organization. D&O coverage pays the legal defense costs and any covered damages for directors, officers, trustees, and in most policies the entity itself. Non-profits often operate on tight budgets with no reserve to absorb a contested lawsuit, which makes this coverage foundational rather than optional.

General Liability

General liability coverage protects your organization when a third party claims bodily injury or property damage caused by your operations or your premises. A visitor who slips on a wet entry floor, a child who trips at your community event, a volunteer who accidentally damages a donor's property while making a pickup: these are the kinds of claims general liability is built to handle. The policy covers both the cost of legal defense and any damages the organization is found responsible to pay, regardless of whether the claim ultimately has merit.

Employment Practices Liability (EPLI)

Employment practices liability insurance covers claims that arise from the employment relationship: wrongful termination, workplace harassment, discrimination allegations, and similar disputes. Non-profits are not exempt from these claims simply because their employees share a mission. The coverage applies to both paid staff and, depending on the policy form, volunteers who work in a staff-like capacity. EPLI also covers the cost of defense, which can run well into five figures even when the claim is dismissed early.

Commercial Property and Business Income

Commercial property insurance covers the physical assets your organization owns or leases: your building if you own it, your office equipment, furniture, fixtures, and inventory of supplies or donated goods. If a fire, theft, or covered disaster forces you to close temporarily, business income coverage steps in to replace the operating revenue you would have generated during the interruption and pays ongoing fixed expenses like utilities that keep running even when your doors are closed. For a non-profit, lost operating income can mean paused programs and lapsed service contracts, not just a revenue gap.

Workers' Compensation

If one of your employees is injured or becomes ill because of work, workers' compensation covers their medical treatment and a portion of lost wages while they recover. Idaho requires workers' compensation for virtually all employers with at least one employee, and Texas has its own rules for non-subscriber employers. The coverage requirements can also vary by the physical locations where your staff works and where they were hired, so organizations that operate across multiple sites need to verify compliance for each one. Bittick reviews your payroll and locations to make sure your workers' comp structure is correct.

Pairs well with

Commercial Auto Insurance

If your organization owns vehicles or staff and volunteers regularly drive personal vehicles on organizational business, a commercial auto policy or hired-and-non-owned auto endorsement fills the gap that personal auto policies typically exclude.

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Umbrella / Excess Liability

A commercial umbrella policy sits above your general liability and employer's liability limits and pays when a single claim exhausts the underlying coverage. Non-profits that work with vulnerable populations or hold large public events often carry umbrella coverage as a safeguard.

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Professional Liability (Errors and Omissions)

If your organization provides advice, counseling, case management, or professional services, professional liability coverage protects against claims that your guidance or actions caused a client harm, even when your staff acted in good faith.

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Cyber Liability Insurance

Non-profits collect sensitive donor, client, and employee data. A cyber policy covers notification costs, credit monitoring, regulatory fines, and the expense of restoring systems after a breach or ransomware event.

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Crime / Fidelity Coverage

Employee theft and volunteer dishonesty are real exposures for organizations that handle cash, donated goods, or grant funds. A crime policy covers direct financial losses caused by internal fraud that general liability does not cover.

Frequently asked questions

What types of organizations actually need non-profit insurance?
Any tax-exempt organization that has employees, owns or leases property, works with the public, or governs itself through a board should carry some form of non-profit insurance. That includes charities, religious organizations, advocacy groups, volunteer fire departments, recreational clubs, trade associations, and social service agencies. If your organization can be sued, it needs coverage.
Is non-profit insurance cheaper than regular business insurance?
It often is, but it depends on what your organization does and how many people it employs. Carriers recognize that many non-profits have lower revenue and lighter claims histories than comparable for-profit businesses, and they price accordingly. The best way to know what you'll pay is to let Bittick run quotes across multiple carriers for your specific operation.
Do volunteers need to be covered separately, or does the organization's policy cover them?
It depends on the policy form. Some general liability and D&O policies extend coverage to volunteers acting within their assigned role for the organization. Others treat volunteers as third parties. EPLI coverage for volunteers varies even more. Bittick reviews each policy's volunteer language before placement so you know exactly who is covered and in what capacity.
Does workers' comp apply to volunteers in Idaho?
Generally, Idaho workers' compensation law covers employees, not unpaid volunteers. However, some non-profits elect to extend workers' comp to volunteers voluntarily, and others cover volunteer injury exposures through an accident or volunteer accident policy instead. If your volunteers perform physical work, especially anything involving lifting, driving, or construction, it is worth discussing this gap with us specifically.
Our non-profit is in Boise but we have a satellite program in another state. How does that affect coverage?
Multi-state operations add complexity to workers' comp compliance in particular, since each state has its own rules. General liability and property policies can usually be structured to cover all locations on a single policy. Bittick is licensed in CA, CO, ID, NV, OR, TX, VA, and WA, so if your satellite location is in one of those states, we can build a policy that covers the whole organization.
What is the difference between D&O insurance and professional liability for a non-profit?
Directors and officers (D&O) liability covers governance decisions made by the board and leadership: financial mismanagement, conflicts of interest, breach of fiduciary duty, and similar allegations. Professional liability (also called errors and omissions) covers harm that flows from the services your organization provides, such as a counselor giving advice that a client later claims damaged them. Many non-profits that provide direct services to the public carry both.

Talk to Bittick about protecting your organization

Tell us how your non-profit operates and we'll put together a coverage structure that actually fits it.

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