Reviewed by Matthew Bartlett, Director · Last reviewed 2026-06-23
"What limit do I need?" is the second-most-asked question after price. The right answer depends on contractual exposure, profession-specific minimums, claim-quantum patterns, and budget. This entry sets out the framework for choosing a UK PI limit in 2026.
Each and every claim. Each claim has access to the full limit. A £2m policy responds to a £2m claim in year one, and if a second £2m claim arrives in the same year, the policy responds again. The total annual exposure to the insurer is theoretically unlimited, though in practice usually capped at 1–2 reinstatements.
Aggregate. All claims notified in the policy year share a single limit. A £2m aggregate policy can pay £2m to one claim and nothing to a second £500k claim if the first exhausted the limit.
Most UK PI policies are written on an aggregate basis. Some professions (architects, accountants) have moved towards each-and-every-claim structures. SRA Minimum Terms require any-one-claim structures for solicitors.
Many client contracts specify minimum PI levels. For commercial professional services:
Read the contract before quoting. A £25k engagement may require £5m cover under the client's procurement template. The marginal cost of going from £2m to £5m is usually 20–40%, not 150% — buying the higher limit is often the right answer.
| Profession | Minimum | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Solicitors (E&W) | £2m any one claim | SRA Minimum Terms |
| Solicitors (Scotland) | Scheme cover | LSS Master Policy |
| Architects (ARB) | £250k | ARB Code criterion 8; most carry £2m+ |
| Surveyors (RICS) | Banded by fee income | £250k to £1m+ depending on turnover |
| Accountants (ICAEW) | 2.5x annual fee income | Minimum £1.5m |
| IFAs | IPRU-INV 13.1 | £1.85m / £2.5m / £5m bands |
| Mortgage brokers | MIPRU 3.2.7R | £1.85m+ |
| Insurance brokers | MIPRU 3.2.7R | £1.85m+ or 10% of annual income |
Beyond regulatory minimums, sizing is about claim-quantum patterns for your specific work:
PI premium does not scale linearly with limit. Doubling the limit from £1m to £2m usually adds 10–25% to premium. From £2m to £5m, typically 15–35%. From £5m to £10m, 10–25%. The premium curve flattens as the limit increases because the marginal expected loss for very high claims is small relative to the base.
Practically: if you're already paying £2,000 for £2m of cover, going to £5m might cost £2,500. The £500 buys substantial additional protection. Don't under-buy out of habit.
Excess is the amount you pay before insurance responds. Higher excess = lower premium. The trade-off:
For a firm with strong cash reserves, raising the excess to £25k or £50k can fund a higher limit at no net premium cost. For a firm without those reserves, raising the excess creates a new exposure on every claim.
For aggregate policies, reinstatement restores the limit after a claim is paid. Without reinstatement, a £2m policy paying a £1.5m claim leaves £500k for any subsequent claim in the same year. With one reinstatement, the policy returns to £2m for the next claim.
Reinstatement adds typically 5–15% to premium. For high-claim-volume professions (solicitors, IFAs), it is usually worth carrying.
Apex Insurance Brokers Limited will model the cost-by-limit curve for your profession and quote at two or three different limits so you can see the trade-off in writing. FCA firm reference number 724952.
Apex Insurance Brokers serves UK professional services firms and commercial businesses. Call 0117 325 0027, email info@apexinsurancebrokers.co.uk, or request a quotation.
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