A combined liability policy is a single insurance contract that bundles two or more liability covers — typically public liability and employers’ liability, often with product liability, and sometimes with a section of professional indemnity — under one schedule, one renewal date and one premium. It is sold widely to UK SMEs because it is administratively simpler than buying each cover separately.
What a combined liability policy means
The term “combined liability” describes how the cover is packaged, not what is covered. A standalone public liability policy covers third-party injury and property damage arising from the firm’s activities; a standalone employers’ liability policy meets the statutory duty under the Employers’ Liability (Compulsory Insurance) Act 1969; a standalone professional indemnity policy covers liability for professional services. A combined liability policy may include any combination of these, plus extensions such as products liability, financial loss, contract works, or libel and slander.
Most UK combined liability policies sold to SMEs include public liability and employers’ liability as the core. Products liability is usually added at no separate premium for service businesses with limited goods exposure. A PI section, where included, is typically a sub-limited extension rather than a full standalone PI wording — and that distinction matters a great deal when claims arise.
The schedule will set out each section separately, with its own limit, excess and exclusions. The general policy terms — claims notification, fraud, cancellation, jurisdiction — usually apply across all sections unless a particular section overrides them.
How a combined liability policy works in practice
When a claim is notified, the insurer first identifies which section of the policy responds. A slip-and-trip in the client’s reception area is a public liability claim. An injury to an employee is an employers’ liability claim. A negligent piece of advice that causes financial loss to a client is a PI claim. Many real-world scenarios touch more than one section — for example, a contractor whose physical work is defective may face both a PL claim for damage to the client’s property and a PI claim for negligent design.
Several practical features follow from the combined structure:
- Separate limits per section. Each section carries its own limit of indemnity. A typical SME combined liability might show £5m public liability, £10m employers’ liability (the market standard, well above the statutory £5m minimum), £5m products liability and, if a PI section is included, anywhere from £100,000 to £1m PI.
- Aggregate vs each-and-every. PL and EL are usually written on an each-and-every-claim basis, with employers’ liability unlimited in the aggregate by market convention. The PI section, where included, is more often written on an aggregate basis — which means the PI cap is consumed by claims across the year. See aggregate limit PI insurance and each-and-every claim limit.
- Trigger basis. PL and EL are usually written on an occurrence basis (the insurer responds to events occurring during the policy period, whenever notified). PI is written on a claims-made basis (the insurer responds to claims first made and notified during the policy period). A combined policy therefore mixes triggers across sections — read each section’s wording carefully.
- Cross-section interactions. Where the same incident touches more than one section, the policy will set out how excesses, limits and defence costs are shared.
Worked example
A Bristol-based engineering consultancy with £400,000 fee income, six employees and a small workshop buys a combined liability policy. The schedule shows:
- Public liability: £5m each and every claim, £500 excess.
- Employers’ liability: £10m each and every claim, no excess.
- Products liability: £5m in the aggregate, £500 excess.
- Professional indemnity (extension): £250,000 in the aggregate, £2,500 excess, defence costs inside the limit.
A client sues the consultancy after a steelwork specification is found to have caused costly remedial work — quantum claimed is £350,000 plus £80,000 in defence costs. The claim is a PI matter (negligent professional advice causing financial loss). The PI section’s £250,000 aggregate is the relevant cap. Defence costs sit inside the limit, so the £80,000 of legal fees erodes the £250,000 available for indemnity, leaving £170,000 for settlement. The firm pays the £2,500 excess and is exposed for the £180,000 shortfall on settlement (£350,000 claimed minus £170,000 paid).
If the consultancy had bought a standalone PI policy with £1m each-and-every cover and defence costs outside the limit, the claim would have been paid in full subject to the £2,500 excess.
The figures are illustrative. The structural point is that a PI section inside a combined liability package can be materially thinner than a standalone PI policy — both in limit and in the way the limit operates.
When this matters most
Service businesses with mixed exposures. Trades, contractors and small consultancies that have both physical-presence risk (PL/EL) and advisory risk (PI) often find a combined policy attractive for its administrative simplicity. The question is whether the PI section is sized correctly for the advisory exposure, or merely included as a thin extension.
Firms growing into professional services. A firm that started in trades and is moving into design, project management or consultancy may discover that the PI section of its combined liability policy is too small for the new work. Contract requirements — for example a £1m PI requirement in a client appointment — will quickly outgrow a £250,000 sub-limit.
Regulated professions. Solicitors, architects and accountants must hold PI that meets their regulator’s minimum terms. Those minimum terms are not satisfied by a thin PI extension inside a combined liability package. See MTC minimum terms and conditions PI and qualifying insurers SRA PI.
Common variations and market wording
UK combined liability wordings vary widely. Look for:
- “Combined liability” — a generic term used by many insurers; the schedule sets out which sections are included.
- “Tradesman combined” or “office combined” — packaged products aimed at specific SME segments, with pre-set section combinations.
- “Commercial combined” — usually broader, often including property damage, business interruption and liability sections in one wording.
- “PI extension” or “professional services extension” — a sub-section providing limited PI cover, often aggregate, often defence costs inside, often with exclusions that a standalone PI wording would not have.
- “Financial loss extension” — a different beast: not full PI, but cover for third-party financial loss arising from the firm’s PL-type activities (e.g. a contractor whose negligence causes a client’s business to lose money without physical damage).
The schedule and the wording — not the marketing summary — govern. A firm relying on PI cover inside a combined liability policy should ask the broker to confirm in writing the PI section’s limit basis, defence costs treatment, retroactive date and key exclusions.
Related concepts
- Aggregate limit PI insurance — how aggregate limits work and why they matter on PI extensions.
- Defence costs inside vs outside the limit — a key difference between standalone PI and PI extensions.
- Breach of contract cover PI — how PI responds to contract-based claims.
- Professional indemnity policy territory — territorial limits across combined policy sections.
Frequently asked questions
Is a combined liability policy enough PI cover for a consultancy?
Usually no, if the PI exposure is more than incidental. PI extensions inside combined liability packages are typically aggregate, often with defence costs inside the limit, often with retroactive date limited to inception, and often with sub-limits well below the standalone market. For any firm where professional advice is a material activity, a standalone PI wording is the market-standard answer.
Can a combined liability policy meet SRA, ARB or ICAEW PI minimum terms?
Generally not at the PI extension level. Regulated professions’ minimum terms require specific wording on retroactive date, each-and-every-claim limit, aggregation, and defence costs. Combined liability PI extensions usually do not meet those terms. The standalone PI market is where regulated firms buy.
Are PL and EL on a combined policy the same as standalone PL and EL?
Usually yes — most insurers use the same core PL and EL wordings whether sold as a combined package or as standalone. The differences tend to be in extensions, exclusions and the addition of a PI section.
What is the difference between a combined liability and a commercial combined policy?
“Combined liability” generally refers to bundled liability sections (PL/EL/products and sometimes PI). “Commercial combined” is a broader product that usually adds property damage, theft, business interruption and other non-liability sections. The terms are not standardised across insurers — read the schedule.
How is the premium calculated on a combined liability policy?
The total premium is built up from rates applied to each section’s exposure measure — for PL, usually turnover; for EL, usually wage roll; for products, usually turnover; for PI, usually fee income from professional services. Some insurers quote a single combined premium without showing the section breakdown.
Do all sections share the same retroactive date or excess?
Not necessarily. PL and EL do not have retroactive dates in the PI sense — they are occurrence-based. The PI section, if included, has its own retroactive date. Each section can also carry its own excess. The schedule sets out the structure.
Can I increase the PI limit on a combined liability policy?
Sometimes — by endorsement, with additional premium. The ceiling on the PI section is set by the insurer’s underwriting appetite; many combined liability insurers will not offer PI above £1m–£2m. Above that level, a standalone PI policy is usually arranged separately.
What happens at renewal if I need to split the PI out?
A firm that has grown beyond its combined policy’s PI section can move PI to a standalone insurer at renewal. Coordination matters: the new PI policy’s retroactive date should be set to maintain continuity, and the old combined policy’s PI section should be cancelled or its renewal not invited. See PI insurance MTA mid-term adjustment.
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About Apex Insurance Brokers Ltd
Apex Insurance Brokers Ltd is a Bristol-based insurance broker authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (firm reference number 724952). The company is registered in England and Wales under Companies House number 07014570. Contact: info@apexinsurancebrokers.co.uk | 0117 325 0027.
Last reviewed: May 2026 by Apex Insurance Brokers Ltd.
Important: this article is general information, not advice on your specific circumstances. For advice on PI insurance for your firm, contact us on 0117 325 0027 or info@apexinsurancebrokers.co.uk.