Cyber Insurance

Compare cyber insurance quotes from the leading providers

Cyber cover starting at £323 annually or £26.91 per month can provide financial protection and expert support to recover from a data breach or cyber-attack

 Compare cyber insurance cost with the WTW Network

Obtain quotes from a wide range of cyber insurance companies

As a specialist cyber broker, we have access to a wide range of insurance companies operating in the market and can ensure your business is fully protected with a comprehensive 1st and 3rd party policy. Talk to one of our dedicated cyber experts by calling 0345 625 0711.

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What is cyber insurance?

Cyber insurance offers financial protection and third-party support to help recover after a data breach or cyber-attack. There are different types of cyber cover available under the policies and below we explain how they work.

Unfortunately data breaches and cyber crimes are increasingly common, and criminals are targeting business with the objective of committing fraud, holding your business to ransom, or selling your data on the dark web. 

That's why cyber protection can be a smart precaution for any size business. The threat of an attack continues to change, and even with the best practices and security available your business will never be fully protected.

What cyber insurance covers?

Cyber cover will protect against malicious breaches by third-parties or employee actions, whether deliberate or not, can unfortunately negate the security measures your company has in place. Below are the most common attacks that can infiltrate your computer systems and why you need cyber protection.

 Malware insurance

Malware cover

Malware cover can protect against malicious software which can exploit vulnerabilities, potentially allowing your activities to be recorded.

 Ransomware insurance

Ransomware cover

Ransomware insurance offers cover after locking you out your system and then demanding a ransom to release control and not publish data.

 Denial-of-service insurance

Denial-of-service cover

Denial-of-service cover can provide solutions to attacks which seek to render a system or server unavailable, typically overwhelming a server.

Understand how a cyber policy can help protect your business and data in a connected world

Get indemnity™ cyber protection can start at £323 annually or £26.91 per month

What are the benefits of a cyber insurance policy?

If your company holds confidential, customer or employee data, publishes electronic content, transacts business over the internet, or uses service providers for processing information, you should arrange cyber coverage to help protect your business. Below we identify the different types of cover available.

1. Cyber liability

Provides cover for your legal liabilities arising from damages and defence costs from third party claims arising from a data and privacy breach. The cover can offer protection from failure to prevent an individual's data being breached or transmission of harmful malware to a third party.

2. Cyber extortion

Will respond to fraudsters attempting to extort money by threatening to carry out an attack or threatening to expose/destroy data having already compromised the network. The policy coverage will pay the ransom demanded to stop a data leak and restore your systems.

3. Response and notification

Provides access to specialists to mitigate the damage of security and privacy breaches. The policy coverage can include IT security, forensic investigation, legal advice, and the costs associated with notifying any individuals under data protection laws (i.e., GDPR).

4. Business interruption

Provides cover for the subsequent loss of profits and increased costs because of a security or data breach. There is usually a 12 hour waiting period as a deductible, then during the time you are unable to trade the policy coverage will reimburse your loss of profits and increased costs.

6. System damage and fines

Provides for the costs of data and applications to be repaired and restored in the event computer systems are damage from an attack, often critical in getting the company operating again. Regulatory fines coverage provides for fines and penalties imposed by a government or regulatory body because of a security and data breach, where permitted by law.

First-party vs third-party

Below we explain the two separate types of cover available under a cyber policy. First-party coverage which provides for your expenses, and third-party liability coverage which provides for damages and expenses in defending your business against claims.

First-party cyber cover

Will cover the cost of IT security, forensic investigation, legal advice, notifying individuals their data was stolen, cyber extortion, system damage, regulatory fines and subsequent loss of profits and increased costs as a result of a security and data breach.

Third-party cyber liability

Will cover the damages and legal costs in defending allegations and damages from a security or data breach, or infringement of intellectual property rights, including libel, slander or defamation via an electronic platform.

What does cyber insurance cost (£)?

Cyber premiums start at £323 annually or £26.91 per month for a small business, which can provide coverage for a variety of threats with a response hotline, technical advice, legal input, and forensic experts.

However, the cost of cyber insurance will be unique to your business and will depend upon a number of factors, including your turnover, exposure to the USA, the industry that you work, and the security measures you employ.

We can offer guidance to companies to ensure you have the necessary security controls in place to meet insurer's minimum requirements. With increased claims activity greater emphasis is being placed on risk management.

What cyber insurance doesn't cover?

There are many different commercial insurance covers available to help protect your company from financial losses. Talk to a specialist cyber broker to discuss your business needs and how to secure the best coverage at the most affordable premiums. If you are specifically concerned about cyber crime, you may want to consider standalone crime insurance.

Talk with a specialist cyber broker to ensure your policies are adequate to meet your business needs

As a Willis Towers Watson Network Broker, we have access to the best insurers in the cyber market.

How do insurers calculate your cyber insurance cost?

There are various factors we discuss below that can impact insurers perception of your cyber risk. Underwriting your application is a subjective process and each insurer will take an individual view to calculating your cyber risk insurance premium. However, the below guide should provide some helpful information to understand what the cover may cost your business and how you can improve your risk profile.

Business activities

The industry which you work will impact your susceptibility to breaches, and therefore increase your insurance premium cost. For example, the following industries carry an increased expose to claims: accountants, casinos, data aggregators, education sector, financial services, hospitals, hotels, medical industry, payroll services, professional services, solicitors, telecommunications, trading platforms, online gaming, and payment card processors. It's important to clearly identify what business activities you undertake when applying for cover.

Size of turnover

Turnover is a direct rating factor for insurers to calculate your premium cost. The larger your business the higher premiums your business will be required to pay. There will also be certain thresholds, where insurers will provide discounted rates to grow their portfolio. For example, companies with a turnover less than £1 million is the most competitive. Whereas there is significantly less competition when your turnover exceeds £100 million.

Data processed

The number of individual data subjects (otherwise known as personally identifiable individuals PII) is another direct rating factor for insurers. Less than 25,000 is commonly acceptable, once you breach the 100,000 or 250,000 threshold this will impact insurers decision making. In addition, the type of data you hold or process will impact your premium. Sensitive data such as: banking, card details, and medical information is perceived as the highest risk. The larger and more sensitive the data you process or hold the greater risk to insurers and will attract higher premium charges.

Territorial scope

Insurers will want to understand your turnover split by territory. Certain countries such as the US are more litigious in nature and allow for class actions (otherwise known as collective actions) on an opt-in basis which means their ability to bring a demand for compensation that much easier in a court of law. The higher exposure to a legal system which makes more frequent and higher awards means insurers will need to charge higher premiums when calculating the cost of your cyber risk insurance.

Risk management

There is a growing emphasis from insurers requiring minimum controls as conditions within the policies. Cybersecurity remains the first line of defence and if insurers are going to accept your risk, they want to make sure you adhere to best practices that mitigate your exposure to claims. Premium discounts will be available for companies which are able to demonstrate their risk adverse nature. Common controls required by insurers include: backups of critical data, VPN for remote access, multifactor authentication for cloud based services, and cybersecurity training.

Claims history

If you have been the subject to cyber breaches that would have been insured, even if you didn’t have a policy in force you need to disclose that information. Unfortunately, you incur higher premium costs if you have been the subject of cyber claims in the past five years. Insurers will want to understand exactly what occurred, how much the cyber incident cost, and what remedial actions were taken to stop a similar incident occurring again.