PI investigation cost cover pays the legal, forensic, and expert fees incurred in investigating a notified claim, circumstance, or regulatory inquiry before a formal liability position is reached. It is usually written as a defined extension within a PI policy, often subject to its own sub-limit, and sits alongside defence costs cover rather than replacing it. The UK market treats investigation costs as a distinct head because they often arise before any civil claim is on foot.
What PI investigation cost cover means in PI insurance
A “claim” in the legal sense — a written demand for compensation, or proceedings — is only one of the things that can trigger expensive professional engagement. Many situations require a firm to spend money investigating before any claim is made: a regulator opens an inquiry; a former client raises a complaint; an internal review uncovers a possible error; a whistleblower flags a concern; an audit identifies a potential professional negligence exposure. In each case the firm typically needs to instruct external lawyers or specialist experts to find out whether liability exists, what the exposure is, and how to respond.
PI investigation cost cover responds to these costs. Typical wording will pay “the reasonable costs and expenses, fees of lawyers, accountants, and other experts incurred with the insurer’s prior written consent in connection with the investigation of a notified claim, circumstance, or regulatory matter”.
Key features of investigation cost cover under UK PI wordings:
- It is usually a defined extension rather than embedded in core cover, so the schedule will name it and set a sub-limit.
- It typically requires insurer consent before costs are incurred. Failing to seek consent before instructing lawyers is a common reason firms self-fund investigation costs that would otherwise have been covered.
- It usually covers fees of lawyers and experts, not internal time of partners and staff.
- It commonly sits inside or outside the policy limit depending on the wording — and on whether the underlying matter is a claim or a regulatory inquiry. Read the schedule.
- It does not pay fines, penalties, or any amount in the nature of punishment — those remain excluded under the standard fines-and-penalties exclusion.
How PI investigation cost cover works in practice
A firm becomes aware of a potential issue — typical UK triggers include an FCA “minded to” letter, an SRA referral, an ICAEW conduct review, an HSE enquiry into a building safety matter, a client complaint letter that has not yet developed into a formal claim, or an internal review of a series of files following the departure of a senior staff member.
The sequence under most UK PI wordings is:
- Notification. The firm notifies the insurer of the matter as a circumstance under the policy’s circumstance-notification provisions (see circumstance notification PI explained).
- Coverage position. The insurer confirms that the matter falls within the scope of the investigation cost extension and identifies any sub-limit, deductible, or special condition.
- Consent to costs. Before external lawyers or experts are instructed, the firm seeks the insurer’s written consent. The insurer may nominate panel firms or approve the firm’s choice.
- Ongoing oversight. Costs are billed and approved as they accrue. The insurer may set up cost budgets, ask for bill review, or appoint a claims manager to coordinate.
- Outcome. Investigation costs continue to accrue until the matter is resolved — by closure of the inquiry, by issue of a claim that then triggers full defence costs cover, or by agreement that no claim will follow.
If the underlying matter develops into a civil claim, investigation costs typically fold into the broader defence costs cover and the policy responds in the normal way. If the matter resolves without a claim, investigation cost cover stands alone.
Worked UK example: investigation costs in action
Consider a UK accountancy firm that receives an HMRC enquiry letter naming three of its tax clients. The clients ask the firm to lead the response. The firm engages specialist tax counsel and a forensic accountant to review the file. Six months later, the matter is closed without further action; the firm incurs £85,000 in counsel fees and £25,000 in forensic accounting fees.
Under a PI policy with a £250,000 sub-limit on investigation costs, “outside the policy limit”, written on a claims-made basis:
- Costs incurred with the insurer’s prior consent are recovered up to the £250,000 sub-limit.
- The £110,000 spend is within the sub-limit; subject to deductible, the insurer pays the full amount.
- Because the costs sit outside the policy limit, the firm’s main PI limit is preserved for any subsequent claim.
If, by contrast, the costs had been incurred without seeking consent — counsel and the forensic accountant having been engaged before notification — the insurer would have been entitled to refuse some or all of the cost. Some wordings limit recovery to costs that would have been incurred with the insurer’s involvement; some refuse it altogether. The lesson is procedural: notify first, instruct second.
When PI investigation cost cover matters most
Three situations make investigation cost cover particularly valuable:
Regulator-initiated matters. FCA Section 166 reviews, SRA forensic investigations, ICAEW conduct hearings, HSE enquiries under the Building Safety Act 2022, and Information Commissioner’s Office investigations all generate significant cost before any civil claim is made. Without investigation cost cover, those costs come straight out of the firm’s working capital.
Pre-claim file reviews. A complaint letter that hints at possible negligence often requires file review and legal opinion before the firm knows whether to admit liability, deny it, or attempt mitigation. The cost of that review can run into five or six figures on a complex matter.
Multiple-client systemic issues. Where an alleged error affects several clients (a tax position that has been replicated across files; a structural calculation method that turns out to be flawed; advice based on a misread regulation), investigation costs can dwarf the cost of any individual settlement. Cover for those costs is what enables the firm to investigate properly before deciding strategy.
The cover also matters as a discipline tool: insurers’ insistence on consent and costs control during investigation helps firms run a structured response rather than spending freely on early legal advice.
Common variations and market wording
UK PI wordings vary materially on investigation cost cover:
- Investigation costs limited to “claims and circumstances”. Cover responds only where a notified claim or notifiable circumstance triggers the cost. Pure compliance reviews and audit work without a claim trigger are excluded.
- Investigation costs extended to “regulatory matters”. Cover responds to regulatory inquiries even where no civil claim exists. This is materially broader and is increasingly standard in policies for FCA-regulated and SRA-regulated firms.
- Sub-limits. Common UK market sub-limits run £100,000–£500,000 on smaller firm policies and £1m–£5m on larger programs. The sub-limit may be aggregate or each-and-every; check the schedule.
- Inside vs outside limit. Investigation costs may sit inside the policy limit (eroding indemnity available for damages) or outside (additional to the limit). Outside-limit cover is more protective and increasingly available on better wordings.
- Panel counsel requirements. Many UK PI wordings now require investigation cost work to be carried out by panel firms or panel counsel, particularly for SRA and ICAEW matters where insurers have established relationships with specialist firms.
Related concepts
- Defence costs inside vs outside limit — the broader question of how costs interact with the limit.
- Mitigation cost cover — cover for steps taken to reduce a claim before it crystallises.
- Circumstance notification PI explained — the notification gateway that often triggers investigation cost cover.
- Fines and penalties exclusion — the boundary beyond which cover does not respond, even on regulatory matters.
Frequently asked questions
What does PI investigation cost cover actually pay for?
It pays the legal and expert fees of investigating a notified claim, circumstance, or regulatory matter before a formal liability position is reached. Typical recoverable costs include external solicitors’ fees, counsel’s fees, forensic accountants, expert witnesses, and document-management costs. Internal time of the firm’s own partners and staff is not usually covered.
Is investigation cost cover always included in PI?
No. It is a defined extension and varies between wordings. Smaller policies sometimes include only modest investigation cost cover; larger UK programs typically include more substantial sub-limits and broader regulatory triggers. Brokers should confirm the position in writing on the schedule and quote-comparison documents.
Does investigation cost cover pay for regulatory fines?
No. Investigation cost cover pays the cost of responding to a regulator’s inquiry; it does not pay any fine, penalty, or amount that is punitive in character. Those are excluded under the standard fines-and-penalties exclusion, which has not been removed from UK PI wordings post-Consumer Duty. See fines and penalties PI exclusion.
Do I need to notify the insurer before incurring investigation costs?
Yes. Almost every UK PI wording requires prior written consent before external legal or expert costs are incurred against the cover. Costs incurred without consent are commonly refused in whole or in part. Firms that receive an enquiry letter should call the broker before instructing any external adviser.
What is the difference between defence costs and investigation costs?
Defence costs respond to a formal claim being defended — proceedings issued, a pre-action protocol letter, formal allegation of liability. Investigation costs respond before that point, when the firm is determining whether a claim or liability exists at all. Many UK wordings define both heads and align coverage so a matter moves smoothly from investigation into defence as the position develops.
Does investigation cost cover apply to internal investigations?
Sometimes. Cover responds only where the underlying matter is one the policy contemplates — usually a notified claim, circumstance, or regulatory inquiry. A purely internal audit with no external trigger is not generally covered. An internal investigation prompted by a whistleblower allegation that meets the threshold for circumstance notification is typically covered, subject to consent.
Does FCA Section 166 work qualify for investigation cost cover?
In most modern UK PI wordings, yes — provided the cover extends to regulatory matters, the firm notifies the matter as a circumstance, and consent is obtained before the section 166 skilled-person work is procured. The skilled person’s own fees are not investigation costs; those are paid by the firm to the regulator. Investigation cost cover responds to the firm’s own legal and adviser fees in managing the section 166 process. Some wordings include a specific regulatory defence extension that is broader still.
Are investigation costs subject to the policy deductible?
Usually yes. The same deductible that applies to a claim under the policy applies to investigation costs. Some wordings have a separate, lower deductible for investigation cost cover; some have no deductible at all on regulatory defence cover. The schedule sets out the position.
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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.