INSURANCE 101

How Much Business Insurance Do Hardware Companies Need?

10 MIN READ
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How Much Business Insurance Do Hardware Companies Need?
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For hardware companies, the question isn’t just whether you need business insurance—it’s whether you have enough. You might already carry General Liability or Cyber, but are those limits high enough to protect against a product defect that causes injury? Or a cyberattack that compromises customer home data?

Unlike software-only companies, hardware companies operate in a world where the risks are both digital and physical. Insurance gaps can mean costly out-of-pocket settlements, delayed fundraising, or lost deals. That’s why it’s crucial to get your insurance limits right from the start—and revisit them as your company grows.

Common Coverage Types and Recommended Limits

Below is a sample for common types of insurance coverages for hardware companies, along with a stage-based framework to start thinking about how much insurance you might need.

Stage General Liability E&O D&O Cyber EPLI Fiduciary Crime
Seed $1M $1M $500K - $1M $500K $500K
Series A $2M $2M $2M $1M $2M $1M $1M
Series B $4M $3M $3M $3M $3M $2M $3M
Series C $4M+ $5M $5M $5M $5M $3M $4M
Growth $4M+ $10M $10M $10M $5M+ $5M $5M

These ranges are based on typical company benchmarks found in Vouch’s coverage recommendation tool. They should be used as a starting point for budgeting, not a substitute for a custom quote.

Types of Coverage Limits

Before setting limits, it’s important to understand how they work:

  • Per Occurrence: The max your insurer will pay for a single claim.
  • Aggregate: The total amount your policy will cover across all claims during the policy period.
  • Sublimits: Lower limits for specific scenarios (e.g. $50K for cap table disputes under a D&O policy).

Understanding how these limits interact helps you avoid underinsured scenarios and make smarter budgeting decisions.

Factors That Impact How Much Coverage You Need

There’s no universal formula for how much insurance is “enough.” Your business’s risk profile is influenced by a mix of factors.

Company Stage and Size

The more capital you raise, revenue you generate, and employees you hire, the more you have at stake—and the more exposure you carry. As you scale, your limits should scale with you.

  • Seed: Keep costs lean but cover essentials (e.g., GL, D&O, E&O)
  • Series A-B: Add coverages like Cyber, EPLI, and consider higher D&O and E&O
  • Series C+: Consider higher D&O limits, higher cyber limits, and specialized liability add-ons

Industry

Hardware companies often require higher limits in areas that software companies don’t. That’s because they handle both tangible and intangible risks:

  • Product liability: A faulty physical product can cause real-world harm and massive lawsuits.
  • Cyber-physical risk: A breach in your firmware or connected device can lead to injuries or property damage.
  • Shipping and logistics: Damage in transit requires specialized Inland Marine coverage.

Contractual Requirements

Investors, landlords, partners, or enterprise clients often dictate minimum insurance levels. As an example, requirements might include:

  • $1M/$2M General Liability
  • $3M+ D&O before funding rounds
  • Cyber limits based on PII volume or SaaS integrations
  • Hired & Non-Owned Auto for sales teams or ops staff

Always read contracts carefully, or ask a Vouch expert to help review them. Contracts often specify exact endorsements, limits, or even insurers.

Hardware-Specific Considerations for Coverage

Product Liability and Completed Operations

Hardware companies shipping physical goods must anticipate claims for bodily injury or property damage. Even a single incident—like an overheating lithium battery—can trigger a lawsuit..

Cyber + Physical Exposure

Lots of hardware products are now part of the Internet of Things. That means you’re not just managing software breaches, you’re managing their real-world consequences.

  • Compromised home automation systems
  • Malfunctioning medical wearables
  • Sensor-fed analytics leading to bad customer decisions

These risks demand higher-than-average cyber and E&O limits—especially as you grow or pursue enterprise deals.

Shipping and Logistics

If you regularly ship high-value components, finished units, or prototypes, make sure to carry adequate Inland Marine or Cargo limits. Some early-stage teams overlook this and eat the cost of damaged goods.

Equipment and Facilities

If your company relies on expensive machinery (CNC, soldering, testing), make sure your property limits reflect full replacement costs. Equipment Breakdown coverage is also recommended.

Tools and Resources to Estimate Coverage Needs

Vouch’s Coverage Recommendation tool is designed for early-stage and growth tech companies. It considers your stage, industry, and operational details to recommend realistic limit ranges.

Get started today with a more tailored quote by:

  • Starting a no-commitment application
  • Talking to a Vouch expert for guidance based on your product complexity, customer base, and funding timeline

Aligning Insurance Limits with Business Goals

The right insurance coverage—and the right amount—gives hardware startups the confidence to build, ship, and scale without betting the company on a single mistake. Whether you're raising your first round or shipping at scale, aligning your insurance strategy with your business goals helps you stay resilient, fundable, and future-ready.

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute an offer of insurance. Coverage is subject to underwriting, availability, and the terms, conditions, and exclusions of the applicable policy. Not all products are available in all jurisdictions. Please contact Vouch for more information.

Vouch Specialty Insurance Services, LLC (CA - 6004944 - vouch.us/legal/licenses)

“With Vouch, we were able to get the exact coverage we needed without weeks of paperwork — and get the peace of mind that comes with being properly covered.”
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