Liability Insurance for Churches and Charities: What Policies Do You Need?
October 15, 2020 - 5 minutes readAre you aware of what types of liability insurance you should have for your church or charity? And if so, do you have enough cover?
Any organisation that provides services to clients or the public should have some form(s) of liability insurance in place. This is because the organisation could be held liable for injuries or losses someone experiences due to its actions, errors or negligence.
What church liability insurance covers
In a successful claim, liability insurance covers compensation to the wronged party and their legal costs, plus the insured’s costs in defending the claim. So as you might imagine, without the financial protection of insurance, a lawsuit can end up being very expensive!
There are however certain types of events are unlikely to be covered by a policy. This includes extreme sports, high-risk outdoor activities, and sexual abuse by a known perpetrator. Our previous article provides more detail on this.
Churches and charities face many types of liability risk. We will explain some of these and provide some scenarios indicating which types of insurance policies might apply.
Types of liability risk for churches and charities
- Public liability: personal injury, property damage, or advertising injury (e.g. slander, libel, or copyright infringement) experienced by third parties due to the organisation’s actions or negligence.
- Professional indemnity: harm resulting from personal services such as counselling and pastoral care.
- Management liability: losses or harm resulting from misleading statements, breaches of trust, or errors by directors, officers, or employees.
- Crime liability: losses due to criminal acts – e.g. theft of property by an employee, credit card fraud, or robbery of the premises.
- Cyber liability: harm to third parties due to electronic crime, such as exposure of their confidential information.
Churches and not-for-profits can secure cover for the above risks through various types of liability insurance policies. See below for examples.
Liability scenarios and insurance coverage
1. Slips, trips and falls:
Event: A visitor to your faith centre trips over boxes left in a part of the lobby which is normally a walk-through area. The person suffers a serious leg injury and is unable to work for several months, and sues for loss of earnings.
Insurance types: General Liability (Public & Products), or Umbrella Liability.
2. Credit card losses:
Event: a person claims their credit card details were stolen while they were paying for books at your centre and that this led to their card being used fraudulently.
Insurance types: Crime cover.
3. Harm resulting from counselling:
Event: a client undergoes counselling sessions and claims some private details of their case were shared with others.
Insurance types: Professional Indemnity.
4. Data theft:
Event: online attackers steal some of your data that contains private information about a business you deal with and the business owner sues for damages.
Insurance types: Cyber risk cover.
5. Employee dismissal:
Event: an employee claims to have been wrongfully terminated by the organisation and brings a lawsuit for financial losses and pain and suffering.
Insurance types: Management Liability, or Professional Indemnity.
Faith Insurance liability policies
Faith Insurance offers policies that cover all of the above types of scenarios and more. This includes Umbrella Liability insurance.
We are a specialist provider of insurance for churches and not-for-profits. This means we understand the specific risks that these types of organisations face and can provide tailored policies to match.
To find out more about church liability insurance or public liability insurance for churches and charities, get in contact with our office. Alternatively, click on the green button at the top of the page to get a quote.
Further reading
Links to more Faith Insurance articles:
Liability risk and insurance;
Cyber security and insurance;
All ‘insurance 101’ posts.
Written by Tess
Tags: insurance, liability, risk management
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