Professional Liability Insurance

When Does a Subcontractor Need Their Own Professional Liability Policy?

When Does a Subcontractor Need Their Own Professional Liability Policy? — what contractors need to know to protect against professional liability claims.

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Not Every Sub Needs PL — But Some Absolutely Do

Professional liability insurance (also called Errors & Omissions or E&O) protects contractors when a client claims your professional advice, design input, or project management decisions caused them financial harm. It covers legal defense costs and settlements — gaps that general liability leaves wide open.

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The General Rule: Does the Sub Provide Professional Services?

Subcontractors who install per the GC’s or owner’s specifications with no design input, sizing recommendations, or professional consulting role typically don’t need professional liability. Trade contractors following plans provided by others are primarily a GL and workers’ comp exposure.

When Subs Cross Into Professional Services Territory

A subcontractor needs their own PL when they: provide system sizing or design (HVAC, electrical, plumbing), recommend specific products with performance implications, prepare shop drawings with engineering implications, manage other subcontractors, or perform any advisory role beyond installation.

Design-Assist Subcontractors

Design-assist arrangements — where a specialty sub contributes design expertise to the GC’s design-build process — create clear professional liability exposure for the sub. If the sub’s design contribution proves wrong, they can be named in a professional liability claim even if the GC is the primary design-build entity.

Contractual Requirements From GCs

Many GCs now include professional liability requirements for certain specialty subs — particularly HVAC, electrical, and structural specialty contractors. Review your subcontractor agreement for any PL requirements before executing the contract.

Subrogation Risk Without PL

If a GC’s professional liability insurer pays a claim and the root cause is a subcontractor’s professional error, the insurer may subrogate against the sub. Without their own PL, the sub faces this claim uninsured — a financially devastating position for a small specialty contractor.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Does a sub need PL if the GC already has it?
The GC’s PL covers the GC’s professional services. If the sub’s professional error is the root cause of a claim, the GC’s insurer may pursue the sub through subrogation. Each sub responsible for professional services needs their own PL.
Does an HVAC sub need PL?
HVAC contractors who size and specify equipment absolutely need professional liability. System sizing errors can cause significant energy overcosts and performance failures — classic PL claims. HVAC subs who strictly install per plans provided by the engineer may have a lower but not zero PL exposure.
Does an electrical sub need PL?
Electrical contractors who perform load calculations, panel specifications, or system design have professional liability exposure. Those who strictly install per engineer-stamped drawings have less exposure — but smart contractors carry PL regardless given how often field conditions require professional judgment.
What are typical PL limits for specialty subs?
$1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate is a common requirement and a reasonable starting point. Large commercial projects may require higher limits. Verify contract requirements for each project.
Can a sub get project-specific PL instead of an annual policy?
Yes — project-specific PL is available and can be efficient for subs who rarely provide professional services but have a one-time project requiring it.

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