Commercial Property
Insurance
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Overview
Types of commercial property insurance
Just as homeowners insurance protects a homeowner from
the full cost of repairing unforeseen damage to a house,
commercial property insurance protects businesses against
damage to their buildings and contents. In the event of
damage caused by fire or storm, for example, commercial
property insurance can help repair or replace the buildings,
inventory, equipment, machinery, and other business property
affected.
Commercial property owners, both those operating a business
on their property and those leasing property to another
entity, can purchase policies that protect the building
and associated structures. A property owner's policy,
however, will not protect tenants from loss. Business
owners who lease their property may buy policies that
protect the building's contents, such as machinery, furniture
and stored or displayed merchandise.
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Coverage
Property checklist
Property insurance may be purchased on the basis of the
property's actual value (the replacement cost minus depreciation),
its replacement value (the cost of replacing an item without
deducting for depreciation), or on an agreed-upon amount
(commonly used for art objects and other unique items).
You should take a complete inventory of all your business
property, determine its value and decide what's worth
insuring. Make sure the items you want to cover are provided
for in the basic policy; if not, buy more coverage.
Named-peril policies cover certain losses resulting only
from those perils that the policy names; all-risk policies
offer coverage for all perils except those specifically
named in the policy. An all-risk policy is usually sufficient
for the average small business, but all businesses and
their insurance needs are different.
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Reducing Your Risks
How to reduce your risk of loss
Insurance companies evaluate potential policyholders in
terms of the risk of loss they pose. Businesses that appear
to be relatively high risks generally pay more for insurance
coverage, and might have trouble obtaining coverage from
some companies.
Some elements of risk are difficult to control, other
risks are easier. A business property with neat, orderly
grounds is much less at risk of fire than one with debris
piled next to buildings. In fact, risk of loss from fire
is one of the main factors determining the cost of commercial
property insurance. Building or leasing a fire-resistant
building should lower a business's insurance premiums
dramatically.