The age of the internet is now well and truly here to stay, and even the most traditional Main Street businesses that initially resisted e-commerce are turning digital. Whether you have been selling furniture from your storefront for the last two decades or you just opened a boutique last month, there’s a good chance you are thinking of adding online sales to your revenue mix. But does your current retail insurance actually cover those digital transactions?
The answer isn’t always so straightforward. Even the most thorough traditional coverage doesn’t usually account for issues such as a data breach, a product liability claim from an out-of-state customer, or a shipping mishap.
Before you launch your Shopify store or start taking orders through Instagram, here’s what you need to know.
Essential Takeaways:
- Your brick-and-mortar general liability policy typically will not cover cyber incidents or data breaches.
- Product liability applies online, but your coverage limits may need to be adjusted when you shift to wider distribution.
- Shipping and handling introduce new risks that many property policies do not address.
- Credit card processing and data storage present vulnerabilities that require separate cyber liability protection.
- Your coverage needs can change based on whether you intend to handle fulfillment yourself or use third-party services.
Does My Current Business Insurance Cover Online Sales?
Sometimes your current insurance will cover online sales, and sometimes it will not. However, even when it offers protection, it usually does so only partially.
Your existing general liability insurance should still cover the basics. For example, if a product you sell online injures someone, you should be covered. The policy itself doesn’t care whether the customer bought that lamp in your store or through your website. However, general liability stops there. It does not offer protection for cyber-related issues, data breaches, or digital commerce problems.
The world of e-commerce is still relatively new, and most business owner policies were written with physical storefronts in mind. They weren’t designed to protect businesses that store customer credit card information online, ship products across state lines, or depend on steady website uptime for their revenue.
What Specific Risks Does E-Commerce Add to My Business?
The digital side of retail brings exposures you didn’t have when all your customers walked through your door. Cyber liability is at the top of these concerns. When you process online payments, you collect sensitive customer data, such as credit card numbers, addresses, and email addresses. This means that even a minor breach could expose hundreds of records, leaving you responsible for notification costs, credit monitoring, legal fees, and regulatory fines.
Product liability extends beyond your local area as well. When you only sell from your physical location, your exposure is limited to your market. However, when you sell online, you could end up with claims from anywhere in the country.
Website downtime creates issues as well. If a cyberattack takes your site offline during a busy sales period, you could lose a lot of revenue, and standard property insurance isn’t going to cover that lost income.
Shipping can also introduce exposure, with damaged products, lost packages, and delivery failures creating disputes. Although carriers have their own insurance, it’s often limited and may not fully cover high-end items.
Will Adding Cyber Liability Insurance Actually Protect Me?
Yes, but you need to understand what it covers.
Cyber liability insurance is designed for the digital threats your general liability policy ignores, such as data breaches, ransomware attacks, business email compromises, and network security failures. Small businesses are increasingly being targeted because they are more likely to lack strong security measures.
A good cyber policy will cover breach response expenses, including forensic investigations, legal counsel, credit monitoring for the affected customers, and public relations support. It can also cover regulatory fines arising from data protection laws, as well as the costs of restoring your systems following an attack.
Some policies also include business interruption coverage for cyber events, paying for the income you lose when your website goes down. This differs from traditional business interruption insurance, which typically covers only physical property damage.
Cyber insurance will not cover everything, however. These policies usually exclude losses from poor security practices that you already knew about and certain types of social engineering fraud.
Do I Need to Increase My Coverage Limits?
You probably do need to raise it. Here’s why the math changes when you go online.
First, your customer base will expand geographically, potentially exposing you to more claims. If you were serving 5,000 local customers annually and now you’re shipping to 15,000 customers across multiple states, your risk will triple. Your coverage limits need to reflect that.
Product volume often increases with e-commerce, and more transactions mean more opportunities for something to go wrong. You should also consider your inventory value. Many businesses stock more products when they add online sales. If your property insurance is based solely on your in-store inventory levels, you’re likely to be underinsured.
Don’t forget about errors and omissions exposure if you’re providing online advice or service recommendations. Product descriptions and customer reviews can create potential liability that didn’t exist when your transactions were purely face-to-face.
What Should I Tell My Insurance Agent?
When talking to your insurance agent, aim to be as specific as possible about how you’re running your digital operation. A good place to start is the basics. When did your online store launch? What platform are you using, and what percentage of your sales are you expecting to get online? From an insurance standpoint, dipping your toes in with 5% is far different from shifting 40% of your business to the digital realm.
Be sure to explain your fulfillment model. Do you pack and ship orders yourself, or use a third-party logistics provider or dropshipper? Each model presents a different set of risks.
Taking Your Business Online? Let’s Talk Coverage!
If you’re considering leaping into e-commerce, or you’ve already launched online sales, you need the right coverage to address the particular risks involved. At John M. Glover Insurance Agency, our experienced team can put together a solid protection plan that covers both your storefront and your digital operations. Whether you need cyber liability, higher coverage limits, or a complete policy overhaul, we’ll work with you to explain your options and find the best solution. Contact us today to schedule a consultation.

