Pharmaceutical companies are part of a unique industry that is highly regulated, so as to protect the health and well-being of the public.
Ensuring quality, safety and efficacy of preparations and medical products is the foremost concern of these health care companies, who are primarily involved in the manufacturing, fabricating and processing of drugs, devices and equipment intended for human or veterinary use.
What is Pharmaceutical Preparations & Medical Products Insurance?
This package-style approach blends coverage elements designed for manufacturers, contract packagers, and distributors of drugs and medical devices. It addresses product liability, workplace exposures, and professional errors that can arise from research, production, labeling, storage, and distribution. For product-specific liability issues and broader program design, see Medical Products Liability Insurance — Redefining Risk Management, which explains how insurers evaluate manufacturing and product risks.
Who needs it
Typical purchasers include pharmaceutical manufacturers, contract manufacturers, medical device makers, and distributors. Small specialty labs and large-scale formulators both benefit from combined policies that link product liability, workers’ compensation, and professional liability. Organizations handling distribution should also review Insurance Considerations for Pharmaceutical Distributors to understand transportation risks and fulfillment exposures.
What it typically covers
Common coverages in a tailored program include:
- Product liability for bodily injury and property damage from a defective product or contamination
- General liability for premises and operations exposures
- Workers’ compensation for on-site injuries and occupational illness
- Professional liability for errors in formulation, testing, or labeling
- Optional endorsements: product recall response, clinical trial liability, and commercial property or equipment coverage
Manufacturers with on-site processing should also consider class-specific workers’ compensation guidance such as Drug, Medicine, Pharmaceutical Prep. Manufacturing Workers Compensation (class code: 4611) for workplace classification and exposure control.
Common exclusions or limitations
Policies frequently exclude deliberate wrongdoing, expected or intended injury, regulatory fines, and some pollution or cyber events unless specifically endorsed. Research and clinical trial programs may require separate or expanded coverage to address participant injury and product research liabilities.
Factors that influence cost
Underwriting considers product type, annual revenue, batch testing protocols, the presence of controlled substances or APIs, distribution channels, recall history, safety controls, and claims experience. Risk management practices—such as documented SOPs, QA/QC testing, and staff training—can reduce premiums and limit exclusions.
Proof of insurance & compliance
Manufacturers and distributors are often asked for certificates of insurance and specific endorsements by purchasers, contract manufacturers, or regulators. Maintain up-to-date certificates and be prepared to document safety programs and quality-control procedures.
How to get a quote
Start by assembling product lists, recent loss history, testing and recall records, and standard operating procedures. To discuss program options and request coverage tailored to your operations, talk to your agent who can help identify appropriate limits and endorsements.
Frequently Asked Questions
What types of losses does product liability cover?
Product liability typically covers third-party bodily injury and property damage arising from a defective or contaminated product, and can include legal defense costs.
Do clinical trials need special coverage?
Yes. Clinical trials often require specific participant liability and research-related endorsements separate from standard product liability—discuss your trial protocols with an underwriter.
How can a company lower insurance costs?
Strong quality-control programs, documented safety procedures, employee training, loss prevention measures, and consolidated insurance programs that reduce coverage gaps can improve underwriting outcomes and potentially lower premiums.
Still have questions? Talk to a local insurance expert.