Reviewed by Matthew Bartlett, Director · Last reviewed 2026-06-23
UK veterinary surgeons sit in a slightly unusual position in the PI market. The Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (RCVS) regulates the profession and sets a Code of Professional Conduct, but unlike the SRA or ICAEW, the RCVS does not impose a specific PI minimum sum insured. PI is nonetheless a practical necessity for any practising vet. This entry explains the structure and the typical cover questions for UK veterinary practices in 2026.
The RCVS Code of Professional Conduct requires registered veterinary surgeons to be able to discharge professional liabilities. In practice this means PI cover, though the RCVS does not specify a minimum sum insured or wording requirement. The Practice Standards Scheme (PSS), under which most accredited practices operate, requires evidence of PI as a condition of accreditation.
The practical effect: every accredited veterinary practice carries PI, and every employed vet either has cover through their employer or holds personal cover. Sole-practitioner vets must arrange their own.
Veterinary PI claims typically fall into one of these categories:
Common starting points for UK veterinary PI in 2026:
The Veterinary Defence Society (VDS) is a mutual that has historically been the dominant veterinary PI provider in the UK. They write the great majority of the market. Commercial alternatives exist but most vets first consider VDS.
The trade-off: VDS membership offers profession-specific expertise and RCVS investigation handling that commercial insurers may not match. Commercial cover may be cheaper or have specific extensions VDS does not offer. A broker reviewing a vet's options should be able to discuss both.
The limitation period for claims against vets is six years for contract-based claims and six years for tort (subject to discoverability rules). Run-off cover for six years post-retirement is the typical benchmark. Annual run-off premium is usually a percentage of the last live premium, declining over the run-off period.
Veterinary claims often surface through an RCVS complaint rather than a direct claim. The PI policy will usually treat an RCVS complaint as a "circumstance" notifiable to insurers even if no formal claim has been made. Early notification protects the policy that was on cover at the time and lets the insurer brief defence counsel.
Apex Insurance Brokers Limited arranges PI cover for UK veterinary surgeons and practices. FCA firm reference number 724952. We can discuss the VDS option alongside commercial alternatives, the right sum insured for your case mix, and the run-off considerations for retiring practitioners.
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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