Personal Insurance
Protect Your Big Event Before Something Goes Wrong
Special event insurance covers the liability, cancellation costs, and alcohol-related risks that come with hosting a celebration.
Special event insurance is a short-term policy that protects hosts from financial losses tied to a specific gathering, covering everything from a guest's injury at a wedding reception to non-refundable vendor deposits when a venue goes under. It is not a standing policy you maintain year-round; you buy it for a defined event window, and it expires when the event ends.
Most venues in the Treasure Valley now require proof of event liability coverage before they'll confirm your booking. If you're planning a graduation party at a rented hall in Meridian, a family reunion in a Boise park pavilion, or a backyard wedding in Star, knowing what coverage you actually need, and when to get it, saves real money and real headaches.
What this coverage includes
Event liability coverage
Event liability insurance pays for third-party bodily injury and property damage that happens during your event. If a guest slips on the dance floor and needs medical attention, or someone knocks over a rented display and breaks it, your liability coverage picks up the costs rather than leaving you to pay out of pocket. Most venues require this coverage as a condition of the rental contract, so it is usually the first coverage to arrange. It typically extends to equipment the venue rents directly to you, though gear you rent separately from a third-party vendor is generally not included.
Event cancellation and postponement
Vendors and venues rarely refund deposits when an event falls apart. Event cancellation coverage reimburses those non-refundable costs when something genuinely outside your control forces you to cancel or postpone. Covered causes typically include extreme weather (a late-season blizzard shutting down travel corridors is a real scenario in Idaho), a key vendor or the venue going out of business, or a serious illness affecting you or an immediate family member. Some policies also cover cancellations triggered by communicable disease outbreaks. Buy this coverage as soon as you start putting deposits down, not the week before the event.
Host liquor liability
If you serve alcohol at your event, you take on legal exposure for what your guests do afterward. Host liquor liability coverage protects you if an intoxicated guest injures someone, damages property, or causes an accident after leaving your event. As the host, you can be held responsible for serving alcohol to a guest who then causes harm. This coverage handles lawsuit defense costs, medical bills, and property damage claims tied to alcohol service at your event. It is separate from a commercial liquor license and is designed for private hosts, not bars or restaurants.
What events qualify
Most private celebrations are eligible: anniversary parties, baby showers, birthday parties, family reunions, graduation parties, retirement gatherings, and weddings are the most common. Some event types, including bachelorette and bachelor parties, are routinely excluded by carriers. Policy terms vary, and the length of your event (a single afternoon versus a multi-day destination wedding) affects both coverage structure and timing. Ask us about your specific event before assuming it qualifies.
Pairs well with
Homeowners Insurance
If you host at your own property, your homeowners policy may carry some liability coverage, but its limits are often too low for large gatherings. Reviewing both policies together ensures there are no coverage gaps between the two.
Learn more ›Personal Umbrella Insurance
A personal umbrella policy sits above your event liability and homeowners liability limits. For large weddings or events where alcohol is served, an umbrella adds a meaningful extra layer without a large premium increase.
Learn more ›Auto Insurance
Guests who drink at your event and then drive are a real exposure. While host liquor liability covers your event-related responsibility, making sure your own auto policy is current matters if a vehicle is involved in any event-related incident.
Learn more ›What this coverage protects against
Common risks and how this coverage addresses them. Tap any scenario to expand.
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A guest trips and falls during the reception dinner.
The risk
Your wedding reception is going well until a guest catches a heel on the edge of a dance floor riser and falls hard, fracturing a wrist. The venue's staff calls for an ambulance, and the guest's medical bills quickly reach several thousand dollars. Your family is now fielding calls from their attorney.
How this coverage helps
Event liability coverage steps in to pay the injured guest's medical costs and handles the legal response if a lawsuit follows. You don't have to liquidate the honeymoon fund to settle the claim.
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Your chosen venue closes unexpectedly two months before the event.
The risk
You've paid a substantial deposit on a Boise event center that abruptly closes after the ownership group files for bankruptcy. The venue is dark, the deposit is gone, and you now need to rebook at a new location, likely at a higher rate, on a compressed timeline.
How this coverage helps
Event cancellation coverage reimburses the lost deposit when a venue closure is the cause. That reimbursement gives you the working capital to secure a replacement venue without absorbing the full cost twice.
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A blizzard shuts down travel the day of a late-March outdoor ceremony.
The risk
Spring weather in the Treasure Valley can be unpredictable: a late-season storm can drop enough snow to make rural roads impassable and force guests to stay home. If the ceremony has to be postponed, the catering deposit, the florist deposit, and the photographer retainer are all at risk.
How this coverage helps
Event cancellation coverage includes extreme weather as a covered cause. The policy reimburses non-refundable vendor costs so the postponement costs you time, not a second round of deposits.
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An intoxicated guest damages the venue's property.
The risk
Late in the evening, a guest who has had too much to drink loses his balance and crashes into a decorative wall installation at the venue, causing significant damage. The venue holds you responsible as the host who served the alcohol.
How this coverage helps
Host liquor liability coverage pays for the property damage the guest caused and handles any claim the venue brings against you. Without it, that repair bill lands directly in your lap.
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A family medical emergency forces cancellation the week before the event.
The risk
Your parent suffers a serious medical event six days before a large retirement party you've spent months planning. You have to cancel. Between the caterer, the rented venue, the DJ, and the floral arrangements, your non-refundable commitments total close to three thousand dollars.
How this coverage helps
Event cancellation coverage treats immediate-family illness as a covered cause. The policy reimburses those lost deposits so the financial hit of an already-hard week doesn't compound the stress further.
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A guest's jacket is destroyed when a server spills on it, and the guest demands replacement.
The risk
During a formal dinner party you're hosting at a rented private dining space, a server collides with a guest and ruins an expensive piece of outerwear. The guest looks to you as the host to make them whole.
How this coverage helps
Event liability coverage addresses third-party property damage claims like this one. Rather than negotiating informally and paying out of pocket, you can refer the claim to your carrier and let the policy handle the resolution.
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A key vendor cancels at the last minute, forcing a major replanning cost.
The risk
Your catering company calls two weeks before a large graduation party to say it is shutting down operations immediately. You've paid a deposit that the company cannot return. Finding a replacement caterer on short notice means paying a premium over the original contract price.
How this coverage helps
Event cancellation coverage that includes vendor failure as a covered cause can reimburse the lost deposit and, depending on the policy terms, help offset the cost difference of the replacement vendor. Confirming what your specific policy covers before you sign a vendor contract is the right move.