
Blanket Contractual Liability Insurance
Blanket contractual liability insurance is liability insurance that provides coverage for all contracts in which the insured is assuming liability. Blanket contractual liability insurance is liability insurance that provides coverage for all contracts in which the insured is assuming liability. To be allowed to exhibit, the participating company may be asked to provide a certificate indicating that it has commercial liability insurance, contractor’s personal injury insurance, and blanket contractual liability insurance. A business with a blanket contractual liability insurance policy may still want to purchase a separate liability policy to protect against a specific risk, even if only for the short-term. It is possible to have blanket broad form contractual liability insurance or blanket limited form contractual liability insurance.

What Is Blanket Contractual Liability Insurance?
Blanket contractual liability insurance is liability insurance that provides coverage for all contracts in which the insured is assuming liability. Blanket contractual liability insurance is most commonly used when a business is working with a third party, especially if that third party is using the business’s property.



How Blanket Contractual Liability Insurance Works
Blanket contractual liability insurance is designed to be automatically applicable to any agreement that a business may sign. Businesses are more than willing to accept payment from other companies, but are much less inclined to accept risks that come with the arrangement. To protect itself, a business may require other companies to maintain various types of liability insurance policies.
These policies protect both the insured party and the parties with whom the insured works. The coverage is designed to indemnify or “hold harmless” another person or entity for actions not expressly excluded on the insurance policy.
Blanket contractual liability may be included on a policy or added with an additional endorsement.
In most cases, a business will need to prove that it has insurance by a specific deadline. If the deadline passes before proof is provided, the business will not be allowed to begin work. The business may be required to add other parties to the policy to protect them against risk.
Example of Blanket Contractual Liability
For example, a large, multi-day software industry conference allows companies to showcase their offerings in the exhibition hall. The exhibitors bring their own material and set up their own booths. To be allowed to exhibit, the participating company may be asked to provide a certificate indicating that it has commercial liability insurance, contractor’s personal injury insurance, and blanket contractual liability insurance.
The conference may require policy limits over a specific limit, both for per-occurrence and aggregate liabilities. If the company doesn’t have a blanket contractual liability insurance policy, the conference organizers may suggest an insurer to work with to purchase one.
Special Considerations
A business with a blanket contractual liability insurance policy may still want to purchase a separate liability policy to protect against a specific risk, even if only for the short-term.
It is possible to have blanket broad form contractual liability insurance or blanket limited form contractual liability insurance. Contractual liability coverage was added to 1973 and earlier edition comprehensive general liability (CGL) policies by endorsement. Blanket broad form contractual liability coverage is incorporated into the basic provisions of the 1986 and subsequent commercial general liability (CGL) forms.
Related terms:
Accounting
Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more
Aircraft Insurance
Aircraft insurance provides liability and property coverage of aircraft. read more
Blanket Insurance
Blanket insurance covers many types of property in one place, the same type of property in many places, or numerous properties in multiple places. read more
Business Owner Policy – BOP
A business owner policy (BOP) combines protection from all major property and liability risks into one package. They typically contain business interruption insurance, property insurance, and liability protection. read more
Commercial General Liability (CGL)
Commercial general liability (CGL) insurance provides coverage to a business for claims caused by the business’s operations, products, or on its premises. read more
Contractors Professional Liability Insurance
Contractors professional liability insurance covers contractors for construction errors. read more
Contractual Liability Insurance
Contractual liability insurance protects against liabilities that policyholders assume when entering into a contract. read more
Employers' Liability Insurance
Employers' liability insurance covers businesses against claims by employees who have suffered a job-related injury or illness, or who file lawsuits. read more
What Is Specific Risk?
Specific risk in investing is any downside potential that is peculiar to a single company or sector. It can be avoided by diversifying a portfolio. read more
Third-Party Insurance
Third-party insurance, the most common example being auto insurance, is a policy designed to protect against the actions or claims of a third party. read more