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Commercial Insurance Policy Review Checklist for Year-End


November 21st 2025




Commercial Insurance Policy Review Checklist for Year-End

As the calendar year winds down, most business owners are focused on closing the books, preparing for tax season, and planning for growth in the year ahead. But one task often overlooked at year-end is reviewing your commercial insurance policies.


At Ensign Partners, we offer clients advice and recommendations on insurance coverage for every aspect of their business and personal lives. Insurance is an integral part of our consultant services, helping clients coordinate their insurance plans with legal, finance, and tax interests. We help business owners and high-net worth professionals to create comprehensive, coordinated strategies that integrate these diverse and critical aspects to achieve business success and personal wealth and security.


Businesses evolve over time: new hires, expanded operations, increased revenue, new products or services, or even supply chain shifts. All of these factors change your risk profile. While some companies experience dramatic growth or change, most of the time, change happens gradually. While you're focused on managing that growth, it’s easy to forget that coverage is not automatically growing with your business. If your coverage hasn’t kept up, you may be left exposed when you need protection most.


Closing out the year and undertaking housecleaning tasks for your business provide a good opportunity to review insurance. A year-end policy review ensures your coverage matches your business reality, prevents costly gaps, and may even uncover opportunities to reduce premiums.


1. Review Coverage Limits Against Current Operations

Ask yourself: If the worst happened today, would my current policies fully protect my business? This applies to:


  • General Liability: Do limits match your current contract requirements and customer obligations?
  • Property Insurance: Has the value of your building, equipment, or inventory increased this year? Rising costs of materials and labor may leave you underinsured.
  • Business Interruption: Does your policy provide enough income replacement if operations were shut down for weeks or months?

2. Check for Gaps Created by Growth

Make sure your policies reflect changes such as:


  • New locations, warehouses, or offices.
  • Expanded service areas, delivery zones, or fleet vehicles.
  • Increased payroll or number of employees.
  • New products or services introduced this year.

If you added or expanded operations but didn’t update your policies, you may be unknowingly underinsured.


3. Evaluate Employment-Related Coverage

Employees are one of your greatest assets, but also one of your greatest potential risks. Review:


  • Workers’ Compensation: Is payroll up to date, and does it cover remote workers if applicable?
  • Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI): With evolving labor laws, this coverage is increasingly important to protect against claims of discrimination, harassment, or wrongful termination.
  • Benefits Plans: Ensure your employee benefits meet current needs and comply with any new legal or tax requirements as your workforce grows.

4. Update Cyber and Data Protection Policies

Cyber threats are no longer limited to large corporations; small and mid-sized businesses are prime targets because they are vulnerable and less able to respond swiftly and robustly. If you’ve adopted new technologies, expanded e-commerce, or store sensitive client data, confirm that your cyber liability coverage is complete.


  • Coverage for ransomware attacks and business interruption.
  • Breach notification and customer credit monitoring costs.
  • Third-party liability if vendors or partners are impacted.

5. Review Contracts and Vendor Requirements

Many commercial contracts require specific insurance coverage and minimum limits. At year-end, confirm that your policies:


  • Meet all current client or vendor requirements.
  • Include proper additional insureds and updated endorsements.
  • Are renewed and in place for early 2026 obligations.

6. Analyze Deductibles and Premiums

Rising premiums are a concern for every business. A year-end review is a good time to:


  • Reassess deductibles and evaluate whether adjusting them makes sense.
  • Compare premium increases to industry benchmarks.
  • Identify opportunities to bundle policies or remove unnecessary riders.
  • Solicit quotes from competing insurers.

7. Coordinate with Other Planning

Insurance should integrate with your legal, financial, and tax planning. For example:


  • Are entity structures aligned with policyholders?
  • Are buy-sell agreements properly funded with insurance?
  • Are premiums structured to maximize deductibility?

8. Document and Plan Ahead

Finally, keep a record of your review and build a plan for the coming year:


  • Document policy updates and conversations with your broker.
  • Note renewal dates, premiums, and coverage changes.
  • Set reminders to revisit policies mid-year.

The Ensign Approach

Insurance is just one piece of the bigger puzzle. That’s why Ensign Partners doesn’t just review insurance policies; we integrate risk management into your broader legal, financial, and tax strategies. The goal is comprehensive protection that grows with your enterprise and keeps you ahead of change.


As you close out the year, don’t let your insurance lag behind your success. Contact Ensign Partners today to schedule a coordinated year-end policy review and step into 2026 confident that your coverage is aligned, efficient, and complete.





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