How Much Does Professional Liability (E&O) Insurance Cost?

✓ Verified June 16, 2026

Professional liability cost is the first thing most business owners ask about before buying errors-and-omissions (E&O) coverage. In 2026, the typical small business pays between $500 and $2,500 per year. That works out to roughly $42 to $208 a month. However, your actual premium depends on your profession, your revenue, your claims history, and how much coverage you carry.

The short answer: Most small businesses and solo professionals pay around $61 to $85 per month for professional liability insurance with $1 million per-claim limits. The national median is roughly $1,000 per year. Low-risk consultants may pay as little as $32 a month, while attorneys and architects can pay $125 to $500 a month. Your professional liability cost hinges on your industry, firm size, and loss history more than anything else.

What Professional Liability Cost Looks Like in 2026

Professional liability cost varies widely by profession. A home-based marketing consultant and a medical malpractice attorney are not in the same risk universe. The table below shows median annual and monthly premiums for common professions, based on $1 million per-claim / $2 million aggregate limits.

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Profession Median Annual Premium Median Monthly Cost Typical Range
General / Business Consultant $779 $65/month $500–$1,500/year
IT / Tech Consultant $1,080 $90/month $600–$1,800/year
Accountant / CPA $1,437 $120/month $800–$2,500/year
Real Estate Agent $1,200 $100/month $700–$2,000/year
Architect / Engineer $1,730 $145/month $1,000–$6,000/year
Attorney / Law Firm $3,500 $292/month $1,500–$6,000/year

For example, a solo IT consultant handling basic website work might see a professional liability cost around $441 per year. A mortgage broker doing the same coverage shopping could pay $2,316 per year — nearly five times as much. The difference is the financial exposure each profession creates for its clients.

Coverage limits also move the needle. Jumping from $1 million to $2 million in per-claim limits typically raises your professional liability cost by about 60%. Most small firms start with $1 million/$1 million limits. In most cases, that is enough unless a contract or licensing board specifies higher.

What Drives Professional Liability Cost Up or Down

Five factors control most of the price. Understanding them helps you predict your quote before you even pick up the phone.

1. Your profession. High-stakes fields like law, healthcare, and financial advising carry higher professional liability cost because one mistake can wipe out a client’s savings or health. A bookkeeper pays less than a CPA, and a CPA pays less than a securities attorney. 2. Revenue and firm size. A firm billing $2 million per year typically pays 50% to 80% more than a solo operator billing $100,000.

More revenue means larger contracts, which means larger potential claims. 3. Claims history. Even one past claim can raise your professional liability cost by 25% to 50% for three to five years. Multiple claims can push rates up 75% or more.

4. Deductible choice. Raising your deductible from $1,000 to $5,000 typically saves 10% to 15% on your annual premium. The most common deductible selected is $2,500. 5. Location. States with higher litigation rates — like California, New York, and Florida — tend to have higher professional liability cost than states with lower claim frequency. As a result, a consultant in New York may pay 20% to 30% more than the same consultant in Iowa for identical coverage.

How to Get the Best Professional Liability Cost

Start by getting at least three quotes. Professional liability cost varies significantly between carriers because each one weighs your profession and claims history differently. An insurer that specializes in your field will often beat a generalist by 15% to 25%.

Bundling helps. Many carriers offer a business owner’s policy (BOP) discount when you combine professional liability with general liability. Typically, bundling saves 10% to 15% compared to buying each policy separately. Pay-as-you-go billing also removes the sting of a lump-sum annual premium, and some carriers now offer monthly pay with no financing fee.

Clean up your loss run before you shop. A loss run is your claims history report from your current insurer. If you have three clean years, make sure the quote reflects that. Also consider raising your deductible to $5,000 if your cash reserves can handle a mid-size claim out of pocket. However, do not raise it so high that a claim would hurt your business. Finally, ask about prior-acts coverage if you are switching carriers — a gap in retroactive dates can leave old work exposed.

When This Coverage Is Required vs. Optional

No federal law requires professional liability insurance for most businesses. However, many states require it for specific licensed professions. Even when the law does not mandate it, client contracts often do. For example, a government agency hiring an IT consultant will almost always require $1 million in E&O coverage before signing.

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Profession State Requirement Minimum Coverage
Attorney Oregon Mandatory (state bar PLF) $300,000 aggregate
Real Estate Agent Colorado Mandatory for licensees $300,000 aggregate
Real Estate Agent Tennessee Mandatory for licensees $100,000/claim, $300,000 aggregate
Insurance Agent Rhode Island Mandatory for licensees $250,000/claim, $500,000 aggregate
Home Inspector Arizona Mandatory for licensees $100,000/occurrence, $200,000 aggregate
At least 15 states require real estate agents to carry E&O insurance as a condition of licensure. If you hold a real estate, insurance, or home inspection license, check your state licensing board’s requirements before your renewal date. Operating without required coverage can trigger license suspension.

For professions not listed above, professional liability cost is technically optional under law. In practice, it is still essential. A single client lawsuit alleging negligent advice can easily run $50,000 to $150,000 in defense costs alone — even if you win. As a result, many consultants, accountants, and tech firms carry E&O coverage voluntarily. Confirm your exact requirements with a licensed insurance agent and your state’s Department of Insurance before making a decision.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is professional liability the same thing as E&O insurance?

Yes. Professional liability insurance and errors-and-omissions (E&O) insurance are two names for the same coverage. Both protect you when a client claims your work or advice caused them financial harm. The professional liability cost is identical regardless of which name your carrier uses on the policy.

Does general liability cover professional mistakes?

No. General liability covers bodily injury and property damage — like a client tripping in your office. It does not cover claims based on your professional advice, missed deadlines, or work errors. You need a separate professional liability policy for those risks, and the professional liability cost is in addition to your general liability premium.

Can I get E&O insurance with a past claim on my record?

Yes, but your professional liability cost will be higher. Most carriers will still quote you, though they may exclude the specific type of claim from future coverage. Expect to pay 25% to 50% more for three to five years after a single claim. Shopping multiple carriers is especially important if you have claims history, because each insurer treats past losses differently.

Bottom line: Professional liability cost runs about $500 to $2,500 per year for most small businesses, with a national median near $1,000 annually. Your profession, revenue, and claims history drive the price more than anything else. Get at least three quotes, confirm your state’s requirements with a licensed agent, and do not skip this coverage — one client dispute can cost more than a decade of premiums.

Compare Quotes for Your Business

What you pay depends on your trade, your state, your revenue, and your claims history. The only way to know your real price is to compare several quotes side by side.

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Sources & How to Verify

The information on this page is drawn from official government and industry sources. Insurance requirements, premiums, and state rules change, so always confirm the exact figure with your state, a licensed agent, or the authority source.

  • U.S. Small Business Administration: sba.gov — federal small-business insurance guidance
  • Insurance Information Institute: iii.org — neutral premium and coverage data
  • NAIC: naic.org — state insurance regulation data
  • U.S. Department of Labor: dol.gov — workers’ compensation overview
  • Your state DOI, workers’ comp board, and contractor-licensing board: search “[your state] department of insurance” or “[your state] workers comp” for the exact law and forms

Content last reviewed June 2026. If you notice outdated information, please contact us.

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