Key Takeaways for Retail Business Owners:
- Health insurance premiums are rising by an average of 11% for small businesses, with increases ranging from 5% to 32% depending on the state.
- Cyber insurance now requires mandatory security controls, including employee training, multi-factor authentication, and incident response plans.
- Climate-related coverage is being restricted, with higher deductibles and reduced replacement-cost coverage.
- California’s updated CCPA regulations take effect January 1, 2026, requiring cybersecurity audits for businesses that handle consumer data.
- Remote work policies must be properly documented in your insurance coverage to avoid gaps in protection.
Understanding What’s Changing in 2026
The insurance requirements for retail businesses are shifting significantly as the new year approaches. Between rising costs, increasingly stricter requirements, and changing coverage terms, this isn’t a typical renewal year. These changes are a response to increases in cyberattacks, climate volatility, healthcare cost inflation, and some lingering effects from remote work shifts that many businesses still haven’t properly addressed. For retail business owners, insurance is becoming a necessary component of operational planning.
Health Insurance Premium Increases Are Hitting Small Retailers Hard
Perhaps the most immediate impact retail businesses will experience is a considerable increase in health insurance premiums. The Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker indicates that across 318 small-group insurers nationwide, the median proposed premium increase for 2026 sits at 11%. Some states are seeing increases ranging from 5% to 32%, with Ohio experiencing some of the steepest jumps at an average of 16%.
What is behind these increases? Healthcare costs continue to climb at roughly 9% annually, according to insurer filings analyzed by Peterson-KFF. Insurers are pinning the blame on rising hospital costs, expensive specialty medications (especially GLP-1 drugs for weight loss and diabetes), labor shortages pushing up provider reimbursement rates, and general economic inflation.
For retail businesses already operating on thin margins, these increases can significantly impact budgets. Depending on your current premiums and number of employees, you could be looking at thousands of dollars in additional yearly costs. That’s money that could have otherwise gone toward inventory, marketing, or staffing.
Cyber Insurance Requirements Get Serious
If there’s one area where insurance requirements have completely changed in recent years, it’s cyber coverage. For retail businesses that work with personal data and payment information, this type of coverage is now mandatory. Insurers have learned some expensive lessons and are no longer writing policies for businesses that lack proper security controls.
Starting in 2026, obtaining cyber insurance with many insurers will require demonstrating several foundational security measures. Multi-factor authentication is essentially mandatory across systems that store sensitive data, while regular employee training on phishing needs documentation and testing. You’ll also need an incident response plan outlining what to do in the event of a breach. Most carriers want to see daily data backups stored in secure, off-site locations, and endpoint detection and response software must be deployed across devices.
Some carriers are requiring managed detection and response services to monitor retailers’ networks around the clock. For small retail operations, this requirement can seem daunting. But according to Mastercard data, 46% of small and medium-sized companies have encountered a cyberattack. In short, these insurance requirements reflect real risks that can shut down businesses quickly.
California businesses need to pay particular attention. The state’s updated California Consumer Privacy Act regulations take effect January 1, 2026, and they require businesses that handle consumer data to conduct regular cybersecurity audits and risk assessments.
Climate and Property Coverage Shifts
Property insurance for retail locations is undergoing significant changes as insurers grapple with a rise in climate-related losses. Coverage that used to include full replacement cost for property damage is increasingly being offered only at actual cash value, which factors in depreciation. This means you could receive substantially less than what it would actually cost to replace damaged property fully.
Remote Work and Coverage Gaps
Many businesses have shifted to hybrid models in which administrative staff work remotely part of the time, but few have updated their insurance policies to reflect these changes. Workers’ compensation coverage, general liability, and cyber insurance can have gaps when employees work from home without proper documentation.
If employees work remotely, even occasionally, your insurance carrier needs to know about it. Failing to disclose remote work arrangements can give insurers grounds to deny claims.
Take Action With Your Coverage Today
Insurance regulations and requirements are changing faster than they have in decades. Retailers that stay ahead can save money and avoid surprises when claims happen.
At John M. Glover Insurance Agency, we understand how overwhelming insurance decisions can feel, especially when you’re focused on running your retail business. That’s why our agency specializes in helping small businesses stay on top of these regulatory changes. We can help you make sure you have the right coverage without paying for policies you don’t need. Contact us today to learn more about our services.

