Coverage for Structural Engineering Practice
Structured around how structural engineers design, analyze, and validate building systems, and how risk presents across that work.
Structural engineers are responsible for how buildings and structures perform under load and over time. Their work informs design decisions that affect safety, stability, and constructability.
Exposure is tied to how systems are designed, how assumptions are made, and how those designs are applied in the field. Questions may arise around calculations, coordination, or how conditions were interpreted during construction.
We review how your practice operates before making any recommendation.
Where Exposure Tends to Arise
How Risk Presents in Structural Engineering
Design & Analysis
Structural systems rely on calculations, codes, and assumptions. Differences between design intent and actual conditions can lead to disputes.
Material & System Selection
Material and system choices influence performance. Issues may arise if selections are later questioned or perform differently than expected.
Coordination with Project Teams
Structural engineers work alongside architects, civil engineers, and contractors. Coordination gaps can affect how systems are integrated.
Construction & Field Conditions
Field changes and unforeseen conditions can impact how designs are implemented. These decisions may be reviewed after completion.
What We Place
Coverage Typically Considered for Structural Engineers
Coverage is considered based on how your firm practices, how your contractsare 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.
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.
Cyber Liability
Cyber LiabilityAEC firms carry more data exposure than most expect. Responds to costs from a covered cyber incident.
Who We Work With
How Contracts Affect Coverage
Structural engineering agreements often define scope, standard of care, and design coordination responsibilities. These terms can influence how exposure is allocated across a project.
Contract insurance requirements tied to limits, coverage types, or project-specific obligations are worth reviewing against your actual policies 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 retroactive dates, against how your firm operates.
Step 3
Align Coverage and Contracts
We look at current policies, including limits, exclusions, and retroactive dates, against how your firm operates.
Common Gaps
Before You Review Your Program
The most common issue is not whether coverage exists. It is whether it reflects how the work is performed. Professional liability policies that do not align with the services provided, design assumptions that are not clearly addressed, coordination responsibilities that extend beyond what coverage is structured to support.
These issues tend to surface when a claim is reviewed, not before.
Start the Conversation
Want to See How Your Program Holds Up?
Tell us about your firm and the work you take on.
We'll take a look and share what we find.