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06 July 2026 15 min read
Public Liability Insurance Comparison Guide
Public liability insurance comparison should look beyond headline premium at the indemnity limit, excess, business description and policy exclusions. A cheaper quote may not cover all your activities, match your contract requirements or reflect your actual trade. Trades, landlords and SMEs with non-standard risks often find specialist broker comparison more useful than standard aggregators, which may return limited or no results.
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Public Liability Insurance Comparison: UK Guide for Trades and SMEs

One quote for public liability insurance can look cheap until you see the excess, the activity limits or the exclusions buried in the wording. A proper public liability insurance comparison looks beyond headline premium at the level of indemnity, the excess, the business description and the policy wording: the cheapest quote may not cover all your activities, match your contract requirements or reflect your actual trade.

  • The level of indemnity matters as much as the price. Some contracts, councils and commercial landlords require £5 million or £10 million minimum. Comparing a £1 million policy with a £5 million one is not a like-for-like comparison
  • Your business description must accurately reflect the work you actually do. Many claim disputes start with work that was never clearly declared at the time the policy was taken out
  • Public liability does not replace employers’ liability. If you have staff, you likely need both. They cover different things and neither substitutes for the other
  • Trades with specialist activities need more care. Heat work, work at height, welding, roofing and shop fitting may be excluded or tightly limited on standard policies. These exclusions only come to light after a claim if they are not checked first

Key Takeaways

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  • Subcontractors are treated differently by most insurers. Bona fide subcontractors carry their own insurance and work independently. Labour-only subcontractors work under your direction and the insurer may treat their liability as yours. That distinction affects both eligibility and premium and is worth checking before you declare your workforce
  • Legal defence costs can sit inside or outside the indemnity limit. If they are inside the limit, a defended claim can erode your cover before a penny of damages is paid. Checking this is not splitting hairs: it affects the practical value of the policy
  • Under-declaring work activities to get a lower quote is one of the most common comparison mistakes. If the policy does not reflect the actual risk, it may not respond when needed. The saving at renewal is rarely worth the gap at claim time
  • For non-standard trades, a panel-based comparison service often works better than a standard aggregator. One enquiry goes to multiple FCA-regulated brokers rather than a standard rating engine, which improves the chance of getting a result that actually fits your business

💬 From the MMC Business Insurance Team | FCA Reg. 916241

“The most common error in public liability comparison is under-declaring work activities to get a lower price. That can work fine until you need to make a claim. Then the insurer looks at what the policy actually covers, not what you hoped it would. The second most common issue is ignoring the indemnity limit entirely. A small business takes the cheapest option, wins a contract from a council or commercial landlord that requires £5 million, and finds the policy it bought at £1 million is worthless for that job. Start with the limit you need, then compare.”

Public liability insurance is designed to protect your business if a member of the public says your work, your premises or your business activities caused injury or property damage. If a customer trips over tools left on site, or you damage a client’s flooring while carrying out work, this is the type of policy that may respond, subject to the terms and conditions. That’s why a proper public liability insurance comparison matters, especially if you’re a tradesperson, landlord, retailer or small business owner who needs cover that actually matches the work you do.

£1m–£10m

Typical indemnity range: contracts, councils and landlords often require £5m or £10m minimum

4 factors

Indemnity limit, excess, business description and policy wording: price alone is not the comparison

2 policies

Employers with staff need both public liability AND employers’ liability: one does not replace the other

What a public liability insurance comparison should actually compare

A useful comparison is not just about premium. You need to look at the level of indemnity, the excess, the business description and the policy wording.

The level of indemnity is the maximum amount the insurer may pay for a claim. Many small firms start with £1 million or £2 million, but some contracts, councils or commercial landlords require £5 million or £10 million. If you compare policies with different limits, you are not comparing like with like.

The excess is the amount you pay towards a claim. A lower premium can come with a higher excess, which may not suit a small business trying to manage cash flow. That matters more than many buyers expect.

Your business description is just as important. A handyman, a builder and a property maintenance contractor may sound similar, but insurers can rate them very differently. If the description on the quote does not properly reflect the work you do, the policy may not fit your risk.

Then there is the wording. Some policies are broad, while others exclude specific activities, tools, heights, heat work or work at certain premises. If you do shop fitting, tree surgery, roofing, welding or work in occupied homes, these details matter and should be checked before you buy.

Why prices vary so much

If you have ever run a public liability insurance comparison and seen a wide spread of prices, that usually comes down to underwriting differences. Underwriting is the process insurers and brokers use to assess risk and price it.

Your trade is one factor, but not the only one. Turnover, number of staff, use of subcontractors, claims history, work location and contract type can all affect the quote. A self-employed decorator working in domestic properties may be viewed very differently from a contractor doing refit work in commercial premises at height.

The same applies to landlords and property businesses. If you only need cover for occasional visits to a single residential property, the risk may be fairly simple. If you manage multiple blocks, arrange contractors and have regular contact with tenants and visitors, the risk profile changes considerably.

This is also why online forms can produce limited results for some businesses. If your work falls outside a standard category, a specialist broker may need more detail before giving an accurate quote.

What underwriters look at beyond your trade

Annual turnover: higher turnover typically signals more activity, more client contact and higher potential exposure
Subcontractor use: bona fide subcontractors (with their own insurance) and labour-only subcontractors (working under your direction) are rated differently and both affect the premium
Claims history: previous claims or near-misses should be disclosed accurately: hiding them rarely improves your result and can invalidate cover
Work location: domestic properties, commercial premises, public spaces and occupied buildings each present different risk profiles
Contract type: some commercial or public sector contracts require minimum indemnity limits, specific activity inclusions or evidence of cover before work starts

Public liability insurance comparison for trades and SMEs

For most trades and small firms, the biggest mistake is assuming the cheapest option covers every part of the job. It may not.

If you are an electrician, one policy may include testing and inspection work, another may not. If you are a cleaner, one policy may cover damage to items being cleaned only in limited circumstances, while another may exclude it altogether. If you use heat, work above a set height or carry out labour-only subcontracting, these points should be checked before you buy, not after a claim.

If you employ staff, you may also need employers’ liability insurance, which covers injury or illness claims from employees. That is separate from public liability. Some businesses assume one replaces the other. It does not, and in most cases where you have employees, employers’ liability is a legal requirement.

If you work with clients who insist on contract terms, check whether your policy meets those requirements. Some contracts ask for a minimum indemnity limit, specific business activities to be covered or evidence of insurance before work starts. A cheaper quote that fails those checks can cost you more in lost time and lost contracts.

Compare Public Liability Insurance Quotes

Trades, landlords, SMEs and specialist businesses. One enquiry, FCA-regulated brokers. Free to compare, no obligation.

→ Compare Public Liability Quotes

What to ask before you choose a policy

A good comparison is not just a screen full of prices. It is a chance to ask the right questions.

Start with the basics. Does the policy describe your business correctly, and does it include the work you actually do day to day? If you sometimes take on related work outside your main trade, mention that upfront. Many claim disputes start with work that was never clearly declared.

Then check the indemnity limit. If your clients or landlord require £5 million, comparing a £1 million quote is a distraction. The same goes for excess levels. A policy with a larger excess may still be right for you, but you should make that choice knowingly rather than by default.

You will also want to check exclusions, particularly if you work at height, use heat, hire labour, visit customer premises, work in public spaces or handle expensive property belonging to others. A specialist broker can often identify which standard exclusions apply to your trade before you buy, rather than leaving it for the claim handler to explain afterwards.

Finally, ask how claims are handled and whether legal defence costs are included within the indemnity limit or in addition to it. If they sit inside the limit, a defended claim can erode your cover before a penny of damages is paid.

When specialist comparison makes more sense

Some businesses fit easily into standard insurance journeys. Others do not. If you run a motor trade business, work as a courier, manage a fleet, operate as a landlord with mixed risks, or carry out higher-hazard contracting work, you may find mainstream comparison sites return few results or none at all.

That does not always mean the risk is uninsurable. More often, it means the details need a broker who understands the trade. A panel-based comparison service can help by sending one enquiry to multiple FCA-regulated brokers rather than leaving you to ring around and repeat yourself.

That is the practical value for many SME owners. You save time, but you also improve the chance of hearing back from brokers who deal with your type of risk regularly. MyMoneyComparison.com operates on that basis and is FCA regulated under registration number 916241. It is not an insurer and does not set the premium or policy terms.

Common comparison mistakes

Some errors are easy to avoid once you know where buyers usually go wrong.

The first is under-declaring work activities to get a lower price. That can backfire badly if the policy does not reflect the actual risk. The second is choosing an indemnity limit that only works on paper. If your contract requires £5 million, anything less may be useless for that client.

Another common issue is ignoring subcontractors. Insurers often distinguish between bona fide subcontractors, who carry their own insurance and work independently, and labour-only subcontractors, who work under your direction. That difference can affect both eligibility and premium and is not always obvious from the quote screen.

There is also a tendency to treat all policy wordings as interchangeable. They are not. Two policies can look similar on a results page and still respond very differently once you read the detail.

How to make your comparison more accurate

If you want better quotes, give better information. Be clear about your trade, your annual turnover, the type of premises you work at and whether you use subcontractors. If you have had claims, disclose them accurately. Hiding them rarely helps and can affect cover validity.

It also helps to think about your clients. Domestic-only work, commercial contracts and public sector work can all be viewed differently. The same business can present different risks depending on where and how it operates.

Keep your documents handy. Renewal schedules, current policy wording and claims history can help a broker see where your existing insurance fits and where it falls short. That often leads to a more useful comparison than starting from memory.

Price still matters. Most businesses have a budget. But a sound public liability insurance comparison weighs cost against fit. If a quote is lower because it excludes part of your work, it is not really cheaper. It is simply narrower. The best next step is to compare with your actual business in mind, give enough detail for a broker to assess it properly, and choose on terms as well as price.

Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and does not constitute insurance or financial advice. Policy terms, cover and premiums vary between providers and depend on individual circumstances. Always seek tailored advice from an FCA-regulated broker. MyMoneyComparison.com Ltd is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), registration number 916241.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does public liability insurance cover?
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Public liability insurance covers claims made against your business by members of the public, clients or third parties who say your work, your premises or your business activities caused them injury or damaged their property. For example, a customer slipping on a wet floor in your premises, or you accidentally breaking a client’s property while carrying out work. What is covered depends on the policy wording, and exclusions for certain activities, heights, heat work or contract types are common. The policy responds subject to the indemnity limit, excess and any conditions stated in the wording.

How much public liability insurance do I need?
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The right level of indemnity depends on the type of work you do, the clients you work for and any contract requirements. Most small businesses start with £1 million or £2 million, but councils, commercial landlords and many larger clients routinely require £5 million or £10 million as a minimum condition of contract. Before comparing quotes, check your existing contracts or any tender requirements to find out what limit is actually required. Buying a lower limit because it is cheaper is only useful if that limit is acceptable to your clients.

Is public liability insurance a legal requirement in the UK?
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Public liability insurance is not a legal requirement for most businesses in the UK, unlike employers’ liability insurance which is legally required for most businesses that employ staff. However, it is often a contractual requirement, particularly for work carried out on commercial premises, local authority sites, housing association properties or anywhere governed by a formal contract. Some trades and professional bodies also require it as a condition of membership or accreditation. Even where it is not legally mandated, the financial exposure of operating without it can be significant for any business with regular client or public contact.

What is the difference between public liability and employers’ liability insurance?
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Public liability insurance covers claims made by members of the public, clients or third parties arising from your business activities. Employers’ liability insurance covers claims made by your employees if they suffer injury or illness as a result of their work for you. The two cover different claimants and different situations. Employers’ liability is a legal requirement for most businesses with employees in the UK. Public liability is not a legal requirement but is often contractually required. Neither policy replaces the other, and businesses with staff typically need both.

Does public liability insurance cover subcontractors?
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It depends on whether the subcontractors are bona fide or labour-only, and how your policy handles them. Bona fide subcontractors are independent contractors who carry their own insurance and are responsible for their own work. Labour-only subcontractors work under your direction and supervision, and the insurer may treat their liability exposure as part of your risk. This distinction affects eligibility, premium and how claims involving subcontractor work are assessed. Always declare your use of subcontractors accurately and check how your policy treats them before assuming the cover extends to third-party workers on your behalf.

Compare Public Liability Insurance Quotes

Trades, landlords, SMEs and specialist businesses. Standard and higher-hazard risks. One enquiry, FCA-regulated brokers. No obligation to proceed.

  • £1m to £10m indemnity limits. All trade types including specialist, hazardous and non-standard work
  • FCA authorised and regulated, registration number 916241. Free to compare, no obligation

Put your business details in once. Get public liability quotes back.

MyMoneyComparison.com connects you with FCA-regulated brokers who handle trade and specialist business risks.

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Last updated: July 2026

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Michael Harrington, Founder of MyMoneyComparison.com

PUBLISHED BY
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Michael Harrington
Founder & Director, MyMoneyComparison.com
Michael founded MyMoneyComparison.com in 2013 and has over a decade of experience in UK insurance and financial services. He leads editorial standards, broker partnerships, and compliance, working with FCA-authorised specialist brokers across the UK.

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Editorial Standards:
Content is produced in collaboration with FCA-authorised insurance brokers and reviewed for accuracy and regulatory compliance. MyMoneyComparison.com Ltd is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN: 916241).