Firm vs. Individual E&O — frequently asked questions
What's the difference between firm and individual real estate E&O insurance?
An individual E&O policy covers a single licensee (agent or broker) personally for claims arising from their own work. A firm-wide E&O policy covers the brokerage legal entity itself, plus every broker, agent, and independent contractor performing services on behalf of the firm. The two policies cover overlapping but materially different things — and a brokerage relying only on the individual policies of its agents can have meaningful gaps in coverage at the entity level.
Should a brokerage carry firm-wide E&O or rely on individual agent policies?
Most multi-agent brokerages should carry firm-wide E&O. The two main reasons: (1) individual policies don't automatically extend to the brokerage entity itself or to the brokerage owner's personal assets if the firm is named in a suit, and (2) when each agent has a different carrier with different limits, deductibles, and exclusions, the brokerage can't predict how claims will be handled. A firm-wide policy gives the brokerage consistent coverage and a single point of underwriting.
Do I need a firm excess policy if my agents already have individual E&O?
Often yes. When agents carry individual policies, the brokerage typically needs to layer on a firm excess policy to fill gaps — the entity's own liability, claims against the broker-of-record, agency-relationship exposure that's not pinned to a single agent. The combined cost of individual policies plus a firm excess almost always exceeds the cost of a firm-wide policy with appropriate limits from the start.
Are individual E&O policies required in any state?
Fourteen states statutorily mandate E&O for real estate licensees — typically satisfied with an individual policy or enrollment in a state-sponsored group policy. These states are: Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, and Wyoming. Even in mandate states, brokerages with more than ~10 agents usually benefit from a firm-wide policy that supplements or replaces the state-mandated individual coverage.
What does firm-wide E&O cost vs individual policies?
Individual policies run $100–$500 per agent annually. Firm-wide policies price off the brokerage's gross commission income (GCI): under $1M GCI roughly $600–$2,000; $1M GCI $1,500–$4,000; $5M GCI $7,000–$15,000; $10M GCI $15,000–$30,000; $100M+ GCI can exceed $100,000. Compare individual×agent-count + firm excess to a firm-wide policy at the same per-claim limit — for most multi-agent firms, firm-wide is the better economic choice and gives broader protection.
What's covered by a firm-wide policy that an individual policy might miss?
A firm-wide policy typically covers: (1) claims against the brokerage entity itself even when no specific agent is named, (2) claims against the broker-of-record / qualifying broker, (3) agency-disclosure failures handled at the brokerage level, (4) trust-account commingling allegations (often excluded from individual policies), (5) vicarious liability for independent contractors, (6) consistent defense terms — defense outside the limits, prior-acts coverage — across every transaction the firm handles.