Professional indemnity insurance for UK management consultants
Reviewed by Matthew Bartlett, Director · Last reviewed 2026-06-23
Management consulting is one of the broadest UK professional service categories. The PI exposure varies considerably depending on whether the consultant advises on strategy, operations, IT implementation, M&A, regulatory compliance, or HR. This entry explains the standard PI position for UK management consultants in 2026 and the wording details that matter.
The breadth of the category
"Management consultant" covers everything from a sole strategist advising on growth plans to a 50-person operations consultancy implementing systems for blue-chip clients. The PI exposure ranges accordingly. Three sub-categories worth distinguishing:
Strategy advisers. Advise on direction, market positioning, M&A. Lower transaction volume, higher value per engagement.
Operations consultants. Implement process change, systems, or organisational design. Higher engagement volume, longer client relationships, more touch-points with operational risk.
Functional specialists. HR, finance, marketing, IT — often working alongside the client's in-house team on specific initiatives.
Typical claim scenarios
Strategy that did not work. Client follows recommendations and the outcome is worse than expected. Hardest type of claim to defend on its merits because outcome and advice are entangled.
Implementation failure. A system or process change recommended by the consultant proves infeasible or causes operational disruption.
Cost overrun. A project the consultant scoped exceeds budget, triggering client claim for the difference.
Compliance miss. A consultant advising on regulatory compliance (GDPR, FCA, employment law) misses a requirement.
Forecasting error. A consultant provides financial or commercial forecasts that prove materially wrong, causing the client to make decisions that subsequently lose money.
Conflict of interest. A consultant working for two clients in adjacent markets is alleged to have prejudiced one to benefit the other.
What PI typically covers
Negligent advice — the core protection
Breach of confidentiality
Loss of documents
Defamation in the course of professional services
Defence costs (preferably in addition to the limit)
Definition of professional business. List every service line — strategy, operations, IT implementation, financial advisory, HR consulting, regulatory compliance — that the firm actually does. Standard wordings can be narrow.
Time-element trigger. Standard "errors and omissions" wording responds where the negligence was in the advice itself. Some claims involve outcomes that emerged years later — the policy needs to handle late-emerging claims for old work.
Subcontractor extension. If the consultancy uses associate consultants or subcontractors, the policy should cover their work as part of the consultancy's engagement. Without this, the consultancy bears uninsured exposure for work done by people it directs.
Aggregation language. If a single advisory error affects multiple client outcomes (e.g. a strategic recommendation followed in many subsidiaries), the aggregation clause determines whether those are one claim or many. The wording can make a substantial difference to whether the limit is enough.
Worldwide jurisdiction excluding US/Canada. Standard for UK consultancies; verify that the consultancy's actual client list doesn't include US-domiciled entities.
The contract framework
PI is the backstop. The engagement letter is the first line of defence:
Clear scope of services with exclusions for what the consultant is not doing
Liability cap (commonly 100% of fees or 200% of fees for the engagement)
Exclusion of consequential and indirect losses where commercially possible
Time bar for claims (typically six years from completion of services)
Defined notification mechanism
Acknowledgement of any limits on the consultant's role (e.g. reliance on client-supplied data)
Typical structure for a management consultancy
For a UK management consultancy with £300k – £2m fees, typical structure:
Limit of indemnity £2m – £10m (often driven by client contract requirements)
Defence costs in addition to the limit
Reinstatement of limit (one or more)
Subcontractor extension
Regulatory investigation extension £250k+
Worldwide jurisdiction excluding US/Canada
Annual premium for that structure typically £1,500 – £8,000 depending on size, service mix, and claims history.
About Apex Insurance Brokers
Apex Insurance Brokers Limited arranges PI cover for UK management consultants across the breadth of the category. FCA firm reference number 724952. We discuss the wording in detail rather than handing over a quote and an IPID — the differences between PI policies for management consultants are bigger than the headline premium spread suggests.
Our service promise. We acknowledge every quote request the same working day. For straightforward risks, indicative terms typically follow within five working days. Complex risks — higher-risk buildings, cladding, mid-term proposals requiring fresh underwriting — may take longer; we’ll send you a progress note by the end of the fifth working day in those cases.