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Coverage for Lighting Design Practice

Structured around how lighting designers plan, specify, and coordinate lighting systems, and how risk presents across that work.

Lighting designers shape how spaces are experienced through illumination. Their work often includes fixture selection, layout, controls, and coordination with architectural and MEP systems.

Exposure is tied to how lighting performs in real conditions and how design intent carries through installation. Controls that do not function as intended, fixture substitutions that alter performance, coordination challenges that affect placement or integration.

We review how your practice operates before making any recommendation.

Where Exposure Tends to Arise

How Risk Typically Presents in Lighting Design Work

Design Intent & Visual Outcomes

Lighting is often evaluated subjectively as well as technically. Differences between expected and actual results can lead to questions around design decisions.

Fixture & System Specification

Selections influence performance, compatibility, and maintenance. Issues may arise if specified products behave differently once installed.

Coordination with Project Teams

Lighting design must align with architectural elements and electrical systems. Gaps in coordination can affect installation and performance.

Controls & Integration

Lighting systems often include controls and automation. Performance depends on how these systems are configured and implemented.

What We Place

Coverage Typically Considered for Lighting Designers

Coverage is considered based on how your firm practices, how your contracts are structured, and the types of projects you take on. All coverage is subject to the terms, conditions, and limitations of the policy as issued.

General & Property Liability (BOP) 

Helps respond when someone claims your business caused bodily injury or property damage.

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Commercial Auto

For vehicles owned, leased, or used by the business.

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Workers' Compensation

For covered employee injuries tied to work. This can include office injuries, travel-related work injuries, or incidents during job site visits.

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Professional Liability

Helps respond when a client alleges your professional services caused a financial loss, project issue, or other damages.

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Umbrella Liability

Sits above multiple underlying policies and responds when primary limits are exhausted.

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Excess Liability

Extends the limits of a single underlying policy without changing its terms.

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Cyber Liability

Cyber LiabilityAEC firms carry more data exposure than most expect. Responds to costs from a covered cyber incident.

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Worth Reviewing

How Scope and Deliverables Are Defined

Lighting design agreements outline deliverables, control intent, and coordination responsibilities. How those are defined can influence how responsibility is interpreted when a dispute arises. Insurance requirements are worth reviewing against your current coverage before work begins.

The Process

How We Approach It

From initial conversation to structured recommendation, every step is deliberate.

Step 1
Understand Your Practice

We review the types of projects you take on, how services are delivered, and how your team is structured.

Step 2
Review Existing Coverage

We look at current policies, including limits, exclusions, and structure, against how your firm operates.

Step 3
Align Coverage and Contracts

We consider how your coverage supports your contractual obligations and project roles.

Common Gaps

Before You Review Your Program

Challenges often arise when design intent is interpreted differently during execution. Fixture substitutions, controls configured differently than planned, coordination gaps between disciplines.

Coverage that appears sufficient at a high level may not reflect these details.

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Tell us about your firm and the work you take on.
We'll take a look and share what we find.

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