What does professional indemnity insurance cover? The 2026 UK position
Reviewed by Matthew Bartlett, Director · Last reviewed 2026-06-23
Professional indemnity insurance covers a specific list of risks. Outside that list, it does not respond. This entry sets out what a typical UK PI policy actually covers in 2026, what it usually does not, and the optional extensions firms can add.
The core insuring clause
Most UK PI wordings say something like: "We will indemnify the insured against legal liability to a third party for compensation arising from a breach of professional duty in the conduct of the insured's professional business." That sentence is doing a lot of work. Unpacked, it covers:
A legal liability — not a moral one, and not a discretionary commercial settlement
To a third party — usually a client, but sometimes a non-client who relied on the insured's work
For compensation — financial damages, not contractual debts or restitution
Arising from a breach of professional duty — negligence, error or omission in the professional service
In the conduct of the insured's professional business — work that falls within the activities declared to the insurer
What is typically covered
Negligent advice, services, or design — the core protection
Breach of confidentiality — accidental disclosure of confidential information
Defamation — libel or slander committed in the course of professional services (rare but real)
Intellectual property infringement — accidental breach of copyright, trademark or patent (often subject to a sub-limit)
Loss of documents — costs of reconstituting lost client documents
Dishonesty of employees — protection against client losses caused by employee fraud or dishonesty (sub-limited, with conditions)
Defence costs — legal costs of defending a claim, usually IN ADDITION to the indemnity limit on better wordings, INCLUSIVE on weaker ones
Mitigation costs — costs of taking reasonable steps to avoid or reduce a claim that has not yet been made
Civil regulatory investigation costs — costs of responding to a regulator's investigation, often sub-limited
What is typically NOT covered
Fraud or dishonesty of the insured — but defence costs may be covered until guilt is established
Criminal fines or penalties — uninsurable as a matter of public policy
Bodily injury or property damage — that is public liability territory
Contractual liabilities exceeding common law — performance guarantees, indemnities beyond negligence, agreed liquidated damages
Liabilities of associated companies — work for sister companies, parent companies, or other entities under common control unless specifically extended
Insolvent client losses — losses caused by client insolvency itself (the insured's negligence in advising on insolvency may still be covered)
Asbestos, pollution, terrorism — standard exclusions, sometimes sub-limited back in
US/Canada exposure — usually excluded for UK-domiciled policies unless specifically extended
Cyber events — increasingly carved out from PI and routed to cyber liability cover
Defence costs treatment
This is one of the most important wording points. Two patterns:
Costs in addition — defence costs are paid on top of the limit of indemnity. A £2m policy with £500k of defence costs pays £2.5m in total.
Costs inclusive — defence costs erode the limit. A £2m policy with £500k of defence costs leaves only £1.5m for the claim itself.
For high-litigation professions (solicitors, IFAs, design and build contractors), costs-in-addition wordings are materially more valuable. For low-litigation professions, the difference is smaller but still relevant.
Claims-made trigger
UK PI is almost universally written on a claims-made basis. The policy that responds is the one IN FORCE WHEN THE CLAIM IS MADE, not the one in force when the negligent work was done. This matters when:
A firm changes insurer at renewal — the new insurer picks up claims that come in during their policy period, including for old work, provided no exclusion applies
A firm winds down — without run-off cover, claims arriving after the last live policy are uninsured
An insurer becomes insolvent — the policy goes with them; the FSCS provides some protection but not always at full limits
Optional extensions worth considering
Costs in addition — if your base wording is inclusive, extending to costs-in-addition is usually inexpensive and valuable
Reinstatement of limit — restores the indemnity limit after a claim, so a single big claim doesn't exhaust the year's cover
Wider definition of insured — extends cover to consultants and subcontractors directed by the insured
Aggregation modification — alters how a series of related claims is treated as one (relevant for high-volume professions)
Apex Insurance Brokers Limited reads PI wordings line by line and explains what your policy actually covers. FCA firm reference number 724952. If you would like a wording review on your current policy or guidance on what to look for in a quote, we are happy to discuss.
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.