Property insurance generally covers damage to property from weather events, theft, or vandalism. Property insurance policies can also cover losses from equipment breakdown or loss of electrical power. The property covered can include buildings, tools, equipment, machinery, seed stock, animal feed, and so on.
Guest and customer injuries
Whether the farm hosts guests and customers, agritourism events, u-picks, farm stand sales, CSA pick-ups, or just a party, if someone were to get injured the farm could be on the hook. The farm could also be on the hook for injuries at off-site locations, such as a CSA drop site. Insurance coverage is a crucial risk management strategy for injuries. No matter how safe a farm is, any farm can be called into court to defend themselves. Insurance policies generally provide an attorney to defend the farm’s safety and compensate the injured person for his or her injury. Standard farm property and liability policies provide coverage for injuries to farm guests and customers. However, any off- farm or special activities such as events, processing, u-pick, and CSA drop sites, among others, may need individual endorsements, event riders, or separate policy lines.
Retail & Wholesale Sales
Farms selling to grocery stores and wholesale distributors may wish (or be required by the buyer) to carry a commercial general liability insurance policy. Commercial insurance extends the farm’s liability coverage to a broader set of circumstances including off-farm sales and coverage for things like indemnification and recall costs, to name a few possibilities. Some commercial policies provide some product liability coverage so any farmer with significant sales may want to explore this option.
Worker Injuries Farming is dangerous and worker injuries can and do happen no matter what precautions are taken. The most risk adverse approach is to carry workers’ compensation or other insurance to cover injuries for ALL of the farm’s workers—
including employees, interns, and volunteers- whether required by law or not. If a farm does not carry workers’ compensation, the farm should explore other options as injured workers (or their health insurance companies) may sue the farm. A commercial policy may offer coverage for part-time and seasonal workers. For year-round employees, finding coverage other than workers’ compensation may be very difficult.
Crop & livestock insurance: Crop and livestock insurance covers the farm from significant loss caused by a natural disaster. Diversified farms traditionally have had limited options, but the Whole Farm Revenue Protection (WFRP) policy, now provides revenue coverage for diverse crop and livestock production.The WFRP policy covers a wide variety of naturally caused losses such as hail, disease, or flooding. The Micro-Whole Farm Revenue Program (Micro-WFRP) provides a similar insurance but for farms that have a much smaller annual profit. Multi-Peril Crop Insurance (MPCI) policies are available for selected commodities and regions, and provide coverage on an average market price basis. The Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) provides limited coverage for crops not otherwise insured through the Farm Service Agency (FSA).
How much coverage should I pay for?
Insurance policies have monetary limits; rare is the policy that will cover the full extent of the damage, no matter how great. These limits come in different forms. Specific covered items such as equipment and buildings may have limits on their replacement value.
Liability coverage for injuries and such will have total liability limits. Umbrella policies might be available to raise or distribute policy limits, but a limit remains. Generally, the more coverage the more expensive the premiums. Unfortunately, there’s no cut and dry equation for determining exactly how much insurance to get. A good starting point is to ask yourself the following questions:
• If a particular item was damaged, how what repair or replacement value would the farm business need to stay afloat?
• How high is the risk that such an incident or damage will occur?
• How devastating might a particular risk be if it materialized?
• Are buyers, partners, or other entities expecting a specific level of coverage?
• How much can the farm reasonably afford for insurance risk protection?
Consider more coverage for those items or aspects of your farm business where your discomfort with the risk is highest. The goal is to strike the right balance of not paying too much in premiums but paying enough to be sure that adequate coverage is available
if and when you need to file a claim.
Contract agreements can provide:
More stable revenue streams and identification of the best times to diversify your operation;
Avoidance of unanticipated financial fines or shut-downs;
Clear agreements with your buyers and employees.