Switching between claims-made and occurrence professional liability insurance (Errors & Omissions, E&O) is one of the most critical decisions a professional services firm in the United States can make. The wrong move can leave you exposed to prior-act claims or saddle you with unexpectedly high tail costs. This guide — targeted to businesses operating in major U.S. markets (New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Houston, and nationwide) — explains safe transition strategies, expected costs, insurer examples, and an actionable checklist you can use when changing carriers.
Quick primer: Claims-made vs occurrence (as it affects switching)
- Claims-made: Covers claims first made against you during the policy period — often cheaper initially but requires continuous coverage or purchase of tail coverage to protect prior acts.
- Occurrence: Covers incidents that occurred during the policy period regardless of when the claim is reported — typically higher premium but avoids tail exposure.
For broader background, read: Claims-Made vs Occurrence: Choosing the Right Professional Liability Insurance (Errors & Omissions) Trigger.
Why switching matters (real-world stakes)
- A New York-based consultant who bought claims-made E&O for three years then canceled without tail coverage can face a claim reported years later for work performed during those earlier years — and that claim will not be covered without extended reporting.
- In California (e.g., San Francisco, Los Angeles) where professional disputes often lead to late-filed claims, occurrence policies eliminate the need for tail, but at a higher upfront cost.
Key risk drivers:
- Prior acts exposure (retroactive date gaps)
- Contractual requirements (clients requiring occurrence or continuous claims-made)
- Regulatory investigations that report late
See more on handling prior acts: Handling Prior Acts and Retroactive Exposure in Professional Liability Insurance (Errors & Omissions).
Step-by-step safe transition process
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Inventory exposures and contracts
- List all client contracts with E&O requirements (some require occurrence or continuous claims-made).
- Identify engagements with long tail risk (architecture, accounting, financial advisory).
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Obtain a detailed loss run and prior policy declarations
- Request loss runs from current carrier and confirm retroactive date.
- Confirm whether any endorsements or limitations exist.
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Compare quotes including tail and nose options
- Get quotes for:
- Occurrence policy with equivalent limits
- Claims-made policy + tail (extended reporting endorsement)
- Claims-made with nose (if moving to new claims-made and you request prior acts coverage from new carrier)
- Get quotes for:
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Negotiate retroactive date and nose coverage
- Ask the new claims-made carrier to accept your prior retroactive date (“nose” or prior-acts coverage) where possible.
- If not, calculate tail costs.
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Budget for tail costs and timeline
- If you cancel claims-made, buy tail or keep the claims-made policy in force.
- If moving to occurrence, you may still want to keep claims-made until occurrence takes effect to avoid gaps.
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Document the transition in writing
- Obtain written confirmation of effective dates, retroactive dates, and any endorsements.
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Update client contract language where needed
- Notify clients if insurance form changes are material to contract obligations.
Cost expectations: premiums, tails, and nose coverage
Below are commonly observed U.S. market figures (approximate ranges; final prices depend on revenue, profession, prior claims, and state):
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Typical small/mid-size professional firm E&O (1M/1M limits):
- Annual premium range: $400 – $3,000 for many consultants, IT firms, and small professional services (varies by state and risk).
- Higher-risk professions (architects/engineers, large financial advisers): $5,000 – $25,000+.
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Tail (extended reporting) cost:
- Common rules of thumb: 100% – 300% of the last annual premium for an unlimited tail; sometimes sold as a multi-year tail at a fraction (e.g., single-year tails 20–50% per year).
- Example: if last annual premium = $2,000, expect unlimited tail in the range $2,000 – $6,000 (varies heavily by carrier and risk profile).
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Nose (prior-acts) coverage:
- Often offered by new carrier for a negotiated fee or included; when sold separately it can be similar to 1–3 years of premium depending on underwriting.
Examples from U.S. providers (indicative):
- Hiscox (US): advertises small-business professional liability starting at low hundreds per year for qualifying firms (Hiscox online quotes vary by state and occupation) — see their quote engine for specifics in New York, California, Texas. (source below)
- Insureon (marketplace): shows typical professional liability quote ranges for small firms in NYC, LA, Chicago and local markets with sample quotes often between $300–$1,200 annually for $1M/$1M for low-risk consultants. (source below)
- Major carriers with robust E&O programs: Chubb, CNA, The Hartford, Travelers — pricing tends to be higher for admitted markets and specialized professions. For example, Chubb and CNA typically underwrite higher layer and larger limit exposures (5M+ limits) and charge commensurately.
Sources for pricing context are listed at the end — always obtain tailored broker quotes for Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York City, Houston, and Chicago before acting.
Comparative table: Transition options at a glance
| Transition path | Pros | Cons | Typical cost considerations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Keep claims-made with current carrier | Continuity; no tail purchase yet | Still exposed if you cancel later | Continue paying annual premium ($400–$3,000 typical for small firms) |
| Buy unlimited tail from current carrier | Protects prior acts indefinitely | One-time cost can be 100–300% of last premium | Pay tail (e.g., $2k–$6k if last premium $2k) |
| Switch to occurrence policy | No tail required; peace of mind for future claims | Higher ongoing premium; fewer admitted markets in some states | Ongoing premium premium increase (varies; may be 20–100% higher) |
| New claims-made + nose coverage | New insurer accepts prior retroactive date | Negotiation required; may cost more than tail | Nose fees may approximate a fraction of tail or be included |
Negotiation tactics and questions to ask carriers
- "Will you accept my current retroactive date? If not, what prior-acts/nose coverage can you include and at what cost?"
- "If I switch, can you provide a written endorsement guaranteeing prior acts coverage for the dates X–Y?"
- "What is the estimated premium increase going from claims-made to occurrence for a firm in [New York City / Los Angeles / Chicago] with revenue $X?"
- "If I buy a tail, is it unlimited or for a limited period (e.g., 3, 6, 12 years)?"
For more on negotiating retroactive dates, see: How to Negotiate Retroactive Dates in Professional Liability Insurance (Errors & Omissions) Renewals.
Practical checklist before you switch (printable)
- Obtain current policy declarations, retroactive date, and loss runs
- Get written quotes for: occurrence, new claims-made + nose, tail from current carrier
- Calculate total first-year and 3-year costs (including tail) and compare
- Confirm contractual client requirements for insurance form and limits
- Secure written endorsements for retroactive/prior acts if accepted
- Update internal risk management and contract templates
- Notify clients where required by contract
Location-specific notes (U.S. focus)
- California (San Francisco, Los Angeles): higher litigation frequency can increase claims-made premium and tip many firms toward occurrence if they have deep prior exposure. Watch state licensing or regulatory nuances in construction and tech contracting.
- New York (NYC): higher defense costs and plaintiff awards push premiums up; carriers price according to NYC exposure.
- Texas (Houston, Dallas): competitive market for admitted coverage; premium differences between claims-made and occurrence can be narrower for some professions.
- Illinois (Chicago): professional liability for architects & engineers often carries specialty underwriting; occurrence may be harder/expensive to find at small limits.
Final recommendations
- Do not cancel a claims-made policy until you have:
- Committed occurrence coverage effective the same day OR
- Purchased an adequate tail OR
- Secured written nose/prior-acts coverage from your new claims-made carrier.
- Use a broker experienced in E&O transitions (e.g., brokers who place business with Hiscox, Chubb, CNA, The Hartford, Travelers, Insureon marketplace).
- Run the numbers: cost of tail + new policy vs cost of occurrence policy over a 3–5 year horizon.
For a deep dive on tail specifics and extended reporting, review: What Is Tail Coverage? Managing Extended Reporting for Professional Liability Insurance (Errors & Omissions) Policies.
Sources and further reading
- Insureon — Professional Liability (E&O) cost guidance and sample quotes: https://www.insureon.com/professional-liability-insurance/cost
- Hiscox USA — Professional liability (E&O) product information and small-business pricing examples: https://www.hiscox.com/small-business-insurance/professional-liability-insurance
- NerdWallet — Errors & Omissions insurance: what it costs and why: https://www.nerdwallet.com/article/small-business/errors-and-omissions-insurance-cost
(Prices and ranges above are market-based approximations — always obtain tailored quotes for New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Houston, or other U.S. locations before making coverage changes.)