What is Private Elementary and Secondary Schools?
Private elementary and secondary school insurance helps cover the unique risks faced by independent schools, parochial schools, charter schools, and small private academies. Policies are typically designed to address liability exposures from day-to-day operations, property and contents, student activities, and transportation. Coverage can be bundled or written as separate lines to match the school's operations and risk profile.
Who needs it
Private schools, nonprofit academies, boarding schools, and school-run extracurricular programs generally seek this coverage. Administrators and boards look for protection that fits classroom activities, after-school programs, athletics and field trips. Programs focused on career or skills training may compare specialized options such as the Vocational School Insurance Program to find appropriate limits and endorsements.
What it typically covers
Typical coverage elements include commercial liability for third-party bodily injury or property damage, property coverage for buildings and contents, equipment coverage for instructional tools and computers, and participant accident coverage for students hurt during school activities. Many programs also offer abuse and molestation liability, professional liability for staff, and commercial auto exposure for school-owned vehicles. For schools that operate off-site events or rent facilities, event liability and hired/non-owned auto considerations may be added. Information on tailored programs for non-public institutions can be found in the Non-Public Schools Insurance resource.
Common exclusions or limitations
Exclusions often include intentional acts, some professional services without a separate endorsement, wear-and-tear on property, and certain cyber or data-breach losses unless specifically added. Transportation-related exposures may require specific limits or endorsements for hired and non-owned autos. Policies also commonly limit coverage for extracurricular club activities unless named or scheduled.
Factors that influence cost
Underwriting factors that influence premiums include student population size, presence of on-campus housing, frequency of athletic and off-site events, number and type of vehicles, security and supervision practices, and claims history. Specialized programs—such as those for technical or shop instruction—may require higher limits or equipment floater coverage; see examples like the Colonial General Insurance Agency Technical School Insurance Program for options that address hands-on training exposures.
Proof of insurance & compliance
Schools are often asked to provide certificates of insurance to landlords, event venues, and state agencies. Certificates typically list liability limits, effective dates, and any additional insured endorsements. Maintain updated policies and a centralized method for issuing certificates to meet vendor, facility, or contractual requirements.
How to get a quote
To get an accurate quote, compile basic information: enrollment numbers, building values, descriptions of extracurricular programs, fleet details, and recent loss history. Underwriters may request a copy of safety policies, volunteer screening procedures, and facility maintenance records. To compare options quickly, you can discuss with your insurance agent or submit these details online through a marketplace or broker portal.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do private schools need separate liability for athletics?
Many schools add athletic liability or participant accident coverage to address sports-related injuries; limits and requirements vary by sport and competition level.
Will a standard property policy cover expensive technology and lab equipment?
High-value items often need scheduled coverage or a blanket equipment floater to ensure full replacement cost protection rather than standard property limits.
How does student transportation affect premiums?
Owned vehicles, frequency of trips, drivers’ qualifications, and whether buses are contracted versus school-owned all affect underwriting and premium costs.
Still have questions? Talk to a local insurance expert.