AI Liability Insurance for Small Business: How Counterpart's Affirmative AI Coverage Closes the Silent Policy Gap in 2026
Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash
- 92% of small businesses now use AI tools, but fewer than 33% carry management and professional liability coverage — leaving most dangerously exposed to AI-related lawsuits.
- Counterpart expanded its Affirmative AI Coverage in November 2025 and added a Technology E&O Insuring Agreement, explicitly confirming policy coverage for AI-related claims.
- EEOC (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission) pre-litigation inquiries hit a 60-year record of nearly 270,000 in FY2025, driven in part by AI hiring and employment discrimination claims targeting small businesses.
- 89% of small business owners say they are not confident their current policy coverage would protect them if an AI-related claim were filed — a gap affirmative AI coverage is specifically designed to close.
What Happened
In November 2025, insurtech company Counterpart made a significant move in the specialty insurance world: it expanded its Affirmative AI Coverage and introduced a new Technology Errors & Omissions (E&O — meaning coverage for mistakes or failures in delivering professional services) Insuring Agreement. This expansion extended across its Miscellaneous Professional Liability (MPL) and Allied Health product lines, directly addressing the growing problem of "silent AI" policies — traditional insurance contracts that neither explicitly cover nor exclude claims involving artificial intelligence.
The momentum didn't stop there. In April 2026, Counterpart closed a $50 million Series C funding round led by Valor Equity Partners, bringing its total capital raised to $106 million. That investment reflects growing confidence in Counterpart's model: in 2025 alone, the company reported nearly 175% premium growth year-over-year, processed over 250,000 applications, and wrote over 35,000 policies through a broker network of 2,800 agents across four A-rated carriers.
Earlier, in January 2026, Counterpart launched its Agentic Insurance™ platform — an updated system that weaves AI deeply into underwriting (the process insurers use to evaluate and price risk), risk assessment, and claims management workflows. Together, these milestones signal that the era of AI-specific insurance products for small businesses has well and truly arrived — and that the market is beginning to catch up with the risks business owners have been quietly accumulating.
Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash
Why It Matters for Your Coverage
Here's the uncomfortable truth: if you run a small business and you've adopted AI tools — even something as simple as using ChatGPT for customer emails or an AI-powered applicant screening tool — your current insurance policy may leave you completely exposed. That's the "silent AI" problem, and it's more serious than it sounds.
Think of it like adding a delivery service to your business while still carrying only a personal auto insurance policy. Your personal policy probably doesn't cover accidents that happen during commercial deliveries — you'd need a specific endorsement (an add-on to your policy that expands its coverage) to be protected. The same logic applies to AI. Traditional E&O (Errors & Omissions), D&O (Directors & Officers, covering company leadership decisions), Cyber, and CGL (Commercial General Liability) policies were written before AI tools were mainstream. Most either stay silent on AI-related exposures or contain explicit AI exclusions — meaning when a claim hits, you could be left holding the bill.
The scale of the risk is staggering. According to Gallagher's 2025 Survey of Small Business Owners, fewer than 33% of small businesses carry management and professional liability coverage — the category of policy most likely to respond to AI-related claims. And 89% of small business owners say they're not confident their current policy coverage would protect them if something went wrong with an AI-related claim. That's nearly nine out of ten business owners operating without a safety net in one of the most rapidly evolving legal landscapes in modern history.
Those aren't abstract fears. EEOC pre-litigation inquiries — formal complaints that can escalate into costly lawsuits — hit a 60-year record of nearly 270,000 in fiscal year 2025, driven in part by AI-related hiring and employment discrimination claims targeting small businesses. If your company uses AI to screen resumes, score candidates, or schedule interviews, you could be directly in that crosshairs.
"We are witnessing a generation of small business owners walking into the most litigious environment in American history without protection," said Tanner Hackett, CEO and Founder of Counterpart. "AI-related lawsuits are already being filed targeting hiring, content creation, and customer service practices."
Mike Muglia, Professional Liability Lead at Counterpart, echoed that urgency: "AI risks have moved from theory to the courtroom. A lot of small business owners and startup leaders are using AI to work faster and deliver a higher level of service, but they don't always see the liability that comes with it."
Conducting a thorough insurance comparison between your current policy and affirmative AI coverage options isn't just smart financial planning — it could be the difference between surviving a lawsuit and closing your doors. A proper risk assessment of your AI tool usage is the first step every business owner should take before their next renewal. Understanding exactly what your current policy covers — and what it doesn't — has never been more urgent.
The AI Angle
Building on the coverage gaps described above, what makes Counterpart's approach especially compelling is how it uses AI not just as the subject of coverage, but as the engine powering how that coverage actually works.
Counterpart's Agentic Insurance™ platform, launched in January 2026, integrates AI into three core workflows: underwriting automation (using algorithms to evaluate and price applications faster and more consistently than traditional manual review), risk assessment (identifying exposures specific to a business's AI tool usage patterns), and claims management (tracking, routing, and resolving claims with far greater speed and accuracy). The results are measurable — Counterpart's claims resolution speed is more than twice as fast as sector benchmarks, with outcomes more than 10% better than industry averages.
For policyholders, AI-driven claims management translates directly into real-world insurance savings: faster resolutions mean fewer legal fees, less business disruption, and more accurate policy pricing over time. As underwriting automation matures, expect insurers to offer increasingly granular, usage-based pricing — rewarding businesses that demonstrate responsible AI governance with meaningfully lower premiums.
What Should You Do? 3 Action Steps
Pull out your existing E&O, D&O, Cyber, or CGL policy and look for two things: language that explicitly covers AI-related claims, and language that explicitly excludes them. If you find neither — that's the silent AI gap. Document every AI tool your business currently uses, from marketing automation and customer chatbots to hiring screening software, so you have a clear picture of your risk assessment needs before shopping for new coverage. This audit is the essential foundation for any meaningful insurance comparison and will help your broker understand exactly what protections you need.
Not all brokers are current on AI-specific policy coverage developments — this market is evolving fast. Ask directly: "Does this policy affirmatively cover claims arising from my use of AI tools?" If the answer is vague or non-committal, it's time for a broader insurance comparison. Counterpart distributes through a network of 2,800 agents, so there's a reasonable chance your existing broker can access these specialty products. If not, seek out specialty lines brokers who focus on technology and professional liability, as they'll be best positioned to navigate this emerging coverage category on your behalf.
Given the record-breaking EEOC complaint environment and the rapid evolution of AI liability law, your next policy renewal is a critical checkpoint. A licensed agent can help you identify coverage gaps, evaluate whether bundling AI liability with your existing professional liability policy creates meaningful insurance savings, and ensure your policy coverage language is explicit — not silent — on AI. Small changes in policy wording can mean enormous differences in protection. Always consult a licensed insurance professional before making any coverage decisions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does using AI tools in my small business affect my existing E&O insurance coverage in 2026?
Yes, and potentially in ways you haven't anticipated. Most traditional E&O (Errors & Omissions) policies were written before AI tools became common business fixtures. Many are "silent" on AI — meaning they don't explicitly cover or exclude AI-related claims — leaving your policy coverage ambiguous at best. In 2026, with AI-related lawsuits actively being filed, it's critical to seek out affirmative AI coverage that explicitly confirms protection for AI-generated professional errors. Consult a licensed insurance agent to review your current policy language and explore your options before your next renewal.
What is affirmative AI coverage and how is it different from my standard professional liability insurance policy?
Standard professional liability insurance (also called E&O insurance) covers claims arising from mistakes, negligence, or failures in delivering professional services. However, most standard policies were written before AI tools were mainstream and may contain exclusions or ambiguous language around AI-generated errors — such as a hallucinated (completely fabricated) AI recommendation that causes financial or physical harm to a client. Affirmative AI coverage explicitly confirms that claims arising from your use of AI tools fall within your policy coverage, closing the silent AI gap. Think of it as a critical upgrade that makes your insurance contract crystal-clear for the realities of doing business with AI in 2026.
Can AI-powered hiring tools expose my small business to EEOC discrimination lawsuits in 2026?
Absolutely. EEOC pre-litigation inquiries hit a 60-year record of nearly 270,000 in FY2025, and AI-powered hiring tools are increasingly cited in discrimination complaints. If your applicant screening software was trained on biased data, it can produce discriminatory outcomes — and you, as the employer, may be held liable regardless of whether a human or an algorithm made the decision. A thorough risk assessment of your hiring workflows, combined with affirmative AI liability coverage, is essential protection for any small business using automated tools to evaluate candidates in 2026.
How do I find out if my current business insurance policy actually covers AI-related lawsuits?
The fastest way is to search your current policy documents for terms like "artificial intelligence," "AI," "automated decision-making," or "machine learning." If those terms don't appear — or appear only in exclusion clauses — your policy is likely silent on AI. Remember, fewer than 33% of small businesses even carry management and professional liability coverage, let alone explicit affirmative AI policy coverage. Doing an insurance comparison with newer specialty products, such as those offered through Counterpart's network of 2,800 agents, can reveal exactly where your gaps are. A licensed insurance agent is your best guide for interpreting policy language accurately.
What insurance savings can small businesses expect by bundling AI liability coverage with professional liability insurance?
Bundling AI liability coverage with existing professional liability or E&O policies can often reduce overall premium costs compared to purchasing separate standalone policies — similar to how bundling home and auto insurance with a single carrier delivers insurance savings. Beyond premium discounts, AI-powered insurtech platforms like Counterpart's Agentic Insurance™ system resolve claims more than twice as fast as industry benchmarks and deliver outcomes more than 10% better than averages, which can translate into faster resolutions and lower out-of-pocket costs over the life of a claim. Ask your broker to run a full insurance comparison that includes bundled AI coverage options at your next renewal to see what protection — and savings — you may be leaving on the table.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute insurance advice. Always consult a licensed insurance agent for personalized guidance.
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