Coverage for Forensic Engineering Services
Structured around how failures are investigated, analyzed, and presented, and how risk presents across that work.
Forensic engineers investigate failures, damages, and performance issues in built environments. Their work may include site inspections, analysis, reporting, and litigation support.
Exposure is tied to how findings are developed and communicated. Reports are often relied upon by insurers, attorneys, and other parties involved in disputes.
Conclusions may be challenged or reinterpreted. We review how your services are structured before making any recommendation.
Where Exposure Tends to Arise
How Risk Typically Presents in Forensic Engineering
Failure Investigation
Analysis is based on available evidence, site conditions, and documentation.
Opinion & Conclusions
Findings may influence claims decisions, liability discussions, or dispute outcomes.
Documentation & Reporting
Reports are reviewed by multiple parties and may be subject to challenge.
Litigation Context
Work may be used in legal proceedings or formal disputes.
What We Place
Coverage Typically Considered for Forensic Engineers
Coverage is considered based on how your firm operates, the types of projects you take on, and how your contracts are structured. 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.
Commercial Auto
For vehicles owned, leased, or used by the business.
Workers' Compensation
For covered employee injuries tied to work. This can include office injuries, travel-related work injuries, or incidents during job site visits.
Professional Liability
Helps respond when a client alleges your professional services caused a financial loss, project issue, or other damages.
Umbrella Liability
Sits above multiple underlying policies and responds when primary limits are exhausted.
Excess Liability
Extends the limits of a single underlying policy without changing its terms.
Worth Reviewing
How Scope and Use of Opinions Are Defined
Forensic engagements define scope of investigation, reporting format, and intended use of findings. Clarifying reliance and limitations is important when work is used by multiple parties including insurers and legal counsel.
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 Work
We review the types of investigations you perform and how findings are developed.
Step 2
Review Existing Coverage
We assess current policies, including limits and exclusions, against how your services are delivered.
Step 3
Align Coverage and Reporting
We consider how your coverage supports how your opinions are communicated and used.
Common Gaps
Where Findings Are Challenged
Challenges arise when conclusions are reviewed or disputed. Differences in interpretation between experts, new information that emerges after a report is issued, findings applied beyond the original scope.
Coverage that appears sufficient at a high level may not reflect how work is used in dispute settings.
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