Business Owner’s Policy (BOP) quotes for your business
A BOP bundles your essential coverages — general liability, commercial property, and lost business income — into one package, usually for less than buying them separately. It’s the smart starting point for small businesses with a location, equipment, or inventory. Dean Insurance lines up quotes from top-rated U.S. carriers and connects you with licensed agents — one short form, real quotes, no obligation.
A BOP covers a lot — but not everything. It bundles general liability and property, yet workers’ comp (required in most states once you hire) and commercial auto are separate policies. We help you build the full package so nothing important is missed.
What a Business Owner’s Policy includes
A BOP packages the three coverages most small businesses need into a single policy — and lets you bolt on more as you grow.
Third-party bodily injury, property damage, and advertising claims — the coverage clients and landlords ask for most.
Your building, equipment, inventory, and furnishings — protected against fire, theft, vandalism, and storms.
Replaces lost income and covers ongoing bills if a covered loss forces you to close temporarily — the piece standalone liability leaves out.
Extend the package with endorsements like cyber, professional liability, equipment breakdown, spoilage, or hired & non-owned auto.
That third piece is what sets a BOP apart: business income coverage keeps payroll and rent moving when a fire or storm shuts you down — something a general liability policy alone won’t do.
What a BOP does not include
A BOP is a strong core, not the whole picture. Here’s what to carry alongside it — some can be added right onto the policy.
Workers’ compensation is never part of a BOP. It’s a separate policy, required in most states once you have employees.
Cars, vans, and trucks used for work need commercial auto — a separate policy, required for company vehicles.
Professional liability (E&O) covers errors and bad advice. It’s often available as an add-on to your BOP.
Cyber liability handles hacks and breaches. Many carriers let you endorse it onto the BOP.
Standard property coverage excludes flood and quake damage — those need separate policies we can add to your quote.
If you have no location or equipment to insure, standalone general liability may be a better fit than a full BOP.
How it works
Three simple steps to compare a BOP and get protected.
Tell us about your business
Share your industry, your location, and what you need to protect — property, liability, or both. It takes about two minutes.
Compare your options
We line up BOP quotes from top-rated carriers and licensed agents — coverage, limits, add-ons, and price, side by side.
Get covered & certified
Choose the package that fits, get covered, and download your certificate of insurance when clients or landlords ask for proof.
Who a BOP is built for
BOPs are designed for small, lower-risk businesses — especially those with a place, equipment, or inventory to protect. We match you with carriers that specialize in your industry.
Shops with inventory and customers on-site — the classic BOP candidate.
Equipment, a location, and foot traffic — liability and property in one package.
Stations, products, and clients in your chair — covered together with a BOP.
Office space and equipment, with professional liability available as an add-on.
A workshop, tools, and materials to protect alongside your liability.
Warehoused inventory and a location — property and liability bundled.
Studios and gyms with equipment and members on the premises.
Your homeowners policy won’t cover business property or liability — a BOP can.
Why Dean Insurance for a BOP
An independent marketplace built to make bundled coverage simple — compare once, get matched.
How much does a Business Owner’s Policy cost in 2026?
A BOP’s price depends on your industry, the value of your property and inventory, your location and square footage, your revenue, your claims history, and the limits you choose. Most small businesses pay $40–$120 a month; businesses with more property, inventory, or foot traffic pay more. The figures below are illustrative averages, not quotes.
| Business type | Typical monthly cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Home-based / online seller | $40 – $70 | Limited property to insure |
| Professional office | $50 – $90 | Office space and equipment |
| Retail & boutique | $60 – $110 | Inventory + customer foot traffic |
| Salon & personal care | $65 – $115 | Stations, products, clients on-site |
| Café & food service | $90 – $150 | More equipment and higher traffic |
| Contractor with a shop | $80 – $140 | Tools, materials, and a workspace |
💡 Tip: A BOP almost always costs less than buying general liability and commercial property separately — and you gain business income coverage in the bargain. Comparing carriers on the same limits is the simplest way to cut your premium further.
A plain-English guide to the Business Owner’s Policy
What is a Business Owner’s Policy?
A Business Owner’s Policy, or BOP, is a pre-packaged bundle that combines the coverages most small businesses need into one policy at one price. At its core it brings together general liability, commercial property, and business income coverage. Because carriers package these together for lower-risk businesses, a BOP usually costs less than buying the same coverages à la carte — which is why it’s the most common starting point for small businesses with a physical presence.
What’s included
- ✓General liability — third-party injury, property damage, and advertising claims.
- ✓Commercial property — your building, equipment, inventory, and furnishings.
- ✓Business income — lost revenue and ongoing expenses if a covered loss shuts you down.
The business income piece
Business income coverage — sometimes called business interruption — is the part that makes a BOP more than the sum of its pieces. If a fire, storm, or other covered event forces you to close for repairs, it replaces the income you would have earned and helps pay rent, payroll, and other bills while you’re shut down. A standalone general liability policy doesn’t include this, which is a big reason businesses with a location choose a BOP.
What’s not included
A BOP is a strong foundation, not a complete program. It does not include workers’ compensation (required in most states once you hire) or commercial auto (required for business vehicles) — those are always separate policies. Coverages like professional liability and cyber aren’t standard either, though many carriers let you add them as endorsements. Standard property coverage also excludes floods and earthquakes, which need their own policies.
BOP vs. buying coverage separately
You can buy general liability and commercial property as standalone policies, but a BOP usually bundles them for less — and adds business income coverage most people would otherwise skip. The bundle also means one policy, one renewal, and one number to call. For most small businesses with property, the BOP wins on both price and simplicity.
BOP vs. a Commercial Package Policy (CPP)
BOPs are built for small, lower-risk businesses, and carriers set eligibility limits based on size, revenue, industry, and risk. If your business is larger or more complex — bigger property values, higher hazards, or coverages a BOP can’t accommodate — a Commercial Package Policy (CPP) offers the same idea with more flexibility. If you’ve outgrown a BOP, we can point you toward a CPP instead.
How is the price determined?
Carriers weigh your industry and class, the value of your building and contents, your location and square footage, your revenue, your claims history, and the limits and deductibles you choose. Two insurers can price the same shop very differently, so comparing is the simplest way to avoid overpaying for identical coverage.
How Dean Insurance helps
We’re an independent marketplace, so we shop multiple carriers instead of selling one company’s products. You answer a few questions once; we match you with the carriers and licensed agents best suited to your industry, and help you decide which add-ons make sense. The agents and carriers you connect with are licensed and authorized to sell in your state — they handle the advice, the policy, and your certificate of insurance. Using Dean Insurance is free; we’re paid by our partners only when you choose a policy, and your information is never sold to unrelated third parties. See our Privacy Policy for details.
What business owners say
Companies that compared a BOP and got covered with Dean Insurance.
“I was about to buy liability and property as two separate policies. The BOP bundled them for less and threw in business income — I didn’t even know I needed it.”— [PLACEHOLDER] Sofia L., boutique owner, Savannah, GA
“One policy for my café’s liability and all my equipment, plus coverage if I have to close for repairs. The agent added cyber as an endorsement in the same quote.”— [PLACEHOLDER] Andre M., café owner, Madison, WI
“They were upfront that my BOP wouldn’t include workers’ comp and set that up separately. No surprises — exactly what I wanted.”— [PLACEHOLDER] Grace T., salon owner, Boise, ID
Business Owner’s Policy FAQs
The answers business owners ask for most.
What does a Business Owner’s Policy cover?
A BOP bundles general liability, commercial property, and business income coverage into one policy. That means third-party claims, your building and contents, and lost income if a covered loss forces you to close — all in a single package, usually for less than buying them separately.
Does a BOP include workers’ comp?
No. Workers’ compensation is never part of a BOP — it’s a separate policy, required in most states once you have employees. We can quote both together so you’re fully covered.
What’s not included in a BOP?
A BOP excludes workers’ comp and commercial auto (both separate, often required), and standard property coverage excludes floods and earthquakes. Professional liability and cyber aren’t standard either, though many carriers let you add them as endorsements.
How much does a BOP cost?
Most small businesses pay $40–$120 per month. Your price depends on your industry, the value of your property and inventory, location, revenue, and limits. Businesses with more property or foot traffic pay more — comparing carriers is the best way to save.
Is a BOP cheaper than buying coverage separately?
Usually, yes. Carriers bundle general liability and property at a discount, and you gain business income coverage most people would otherwise skip. You also get the simplicity of one policy and one renewal.
Who qualifies for a BOP?
BOPs are built for small, lower-risk businesses, with eligibility based on size, revenue, industry, and risk. Larger or more complex businesses may need a Commercial Package Policy (CPP) instead — we can point you to the right fit.
Can I add coverage to a BOP?
Yes. Common endorsements include cyber, professional liability, equipment breakdown, spoilage, employment practices liability, and hired & non-owned auto. We’ll help you tailor the package to your business.
Do I need a BOP if I work from home?
Often, yes. A homeowners policy generally won’t cover business property or liability. A BOP — or standalone general liability if you have little property — protects a home-based business properly.
Bundle your coverage and save
Compare Business Owner’s Policy quotes from top-rated carriers in minutes. Free, no obligation, and matched to your business — with a certificate ready when clients ask.
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