Commercial Insurance

Public Liability Insurance for South African Businesses

If a customer slips on your premises, a subcontractor damages a client’s property, or someone is injured by your operations, public liability insurance covers your legal defence and any compensation awarded. It is not legally required for every business, but most contracts, landlords, and clients will ask for proof before you start work.

R1m+
Indemnity limits from R1 million to R20 million or more, depending on your industry, contractual obligations, and public exposure.
R10m
Minimum public liability limit prescribed by the STSMA for body corporates. Government tenders and major contracts often require similar minimums.
3rd
Third-party claims only. Employee injury is handled separately under COIDA. Own property damage requires a different policy class.
Insurers we work with
SantamHollardBryte InsuranceOld Mutual InsureCompass Insure
What it covers

Third-party injury and property damage caused by your business operations

Public liability insurance responds when your business is legally liable for bodily injury to a member of the public, or for damage to someone else’s property. It covers the compensation awarded and the legal costs of defending the claim.

A client who trips on a cable during an installation. A passerby whose vehicle is damaged by falling materials on a building site. A customer who has a reaction to a product you applied during a service. These are third-party liability events, and without the right cover in place, the business owner absorbs the cost.

Public liability is not legally mandatory for every business in South Africa, but contracts, lease agreements, venue hire terms, and government tenders regularly require proof of cover. In many industries you cannot start work without it, regardless of what the law says.

Public liability insurance for South African businesses
R1m+Indemnity limits
from R1 million
Cover details

What public liability insurance pays for

The policy responds to three categories of cost arising from a covered third-party claim. All three are typically bundled under a single limit of indemnity.

Bodily injury

Injury to a third party

Medical expenses, rehabilitation costs, and compensation awarded to a person injured by your business operations or on your premises. Covers injury and death claims.

Property damage

Damage to a third party's property

Repair or replacement costs for damage to property belonging to someone else: a client's premises, a customer's vehicle, a neighbour's fence, caused by your business activities or employees.

Legal costs

Legal defence costs

Attorney fees, advocate fees, court costs, and claims investigation expenses. These are covered within or alongside the limit of indemnity and can be significant even when a claim is successfully defended.

Common misconception

COIDA covers your employees. Not your customers.

The Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act (COIDA) provides a statutory compensation mechanism for employees who are injured at work or who contract a disease through their employment. Employers contribute to the Compensation Fund administered by the Department of Employment and Labour.

COIDA is an employee protection framework. It has nothing to do with claims by customers, suppliers, members of the public, or third parties who are injured or whose property is damaged by your business. Those claims are third-party liability claims, and they fall entirely outside COIDA.

The gap: Many business owners assume that because they are registered with and contributing to COIDA, they are covered for all injury-related claims. They are not. A customer injured on your premises, or a member of the public harmed by your operations, has no claim under COIDA; they claim against your business directly. Public liability insurance is the response to that exposure.

Contracts and agreements that typically require proof of cover

01

Commercial lease agreements

Landlords commonly require proof of public liability cover before handing over keys. The minimum limit required is usually specified in the lease.

02

Construction and subcontractor agreements

Main contractors regularly require subcontractors to hold minimum liability limits before they are permitted on site. The limit is often R5 million or R10 million.

03

Government and municipal tenders

Public sector tender documents typically specify minimum liability limits as a condition of award. Failure to hold the required cover disqualifies the bid.

04

Event venues and exhibition organisers

Venues and event organisers require proof of liability cover before confirming a booking or allowing set-up. Exhibitors, vendors, and entertainers are typically all required to carry their own cover.

What it does not cover

Public liability is a specific policy. Know its limits.

Public liability covers third-party claims arising from negligent operations. It does not cover everything a business might face. These are the most common coverage gaps, each requiring a separate policy class.

Not covered

Employee injuries at work

Work-related injuries to your own staff are a COIDA matter. COIDA contributions and the Compensation Fund handle employee injury claims. Public liability does not respond to claims by employees.

Not covered

Professional advice errors

Financial loss caused by your professional advice or failure to perform a professional service is a professional indemnity matter, not public liability. The distinction is physical harm versus economic harm from advice.

Not covered

Damage to your own property

Public liability covers damage to property belonging to third parties. Your own equipment, stock, vehicles, and premises require commercial property or all-risk cover, not public liability.

Add-on required

Product liability

Injury or damage caused by a defective product you manufactured, supplied, or sold is product liability, a separate extension that must be added to the public liability policy. It is not automatically included.

Not covered

Intentional or deliberate acts

Insurance responds to negligence, meaning accidental harm. Intentional injury or deliberate property damage is excluded from all liability policies. Criminal acts by the insured are not covered.

PL covers this

Negligent business operations

Third-party injury or property damage arising from accidental, negligent business activities. If you or your employees caused harm to someone else unintentionally in the course of business, this is what public liability is for.

Who needs it

Any business with contact with the public or working at client premises

Public liability exposure exists in virtually every commercial sector. These are the businesses where third-party claims are most common.

Retail and hospitality

Slip-and-fall incidents, food contamination claims, and damage caused by staff are daily risks for any business serving the public on its premises.

Contractors and trades

Plumbers, electricians, builders, landscapers, and other trades working on client property carry significant liability exposure. Damage to a client's property or injury to a resident or bystander is a routine risk.

Service businesses

Cleaning companies, IT service providers, security companies, and maintenance businesses operating at client sites face liability exposure every time their staff are on someone else's premises.

Events and entertainment

Event organisers, venue operators, and entertainment businesses face concentrated liability exposure: large numbers of people in one place, temporary structures, food and beverage service, and crowd management risks.

Property and facilities management

Managing agent companies, body corporates, and property managers are responsible for the safety of common areas and must carry liability cover for injuries or damage occurring on managed property.

Technology and IT services

On-site IT support, hardware installation, and network infrastructure work create physical liability exposure (separate from professional indemnity) when staff are working at client premises with access to equipment and property.

Indemnity limits

Choosing the right limit of indemnity

The limit of indemnity is the maximum the policy pays for all claims in a policy period, including legal defence costs. The correct limit depends on your industry, the scale of your public exposure, and what your contracts require.

R1m
Entry level
Suitable for very small, low-risk service businesses with limited public interaction and no significant contractual requirements.
R5m
Common standard
The practical starting point for most businesses. Sufficient for many commercial leases, subcontractor agreements, and service contracts.
R10m
Preferred for higher-risk
Required for body corporates under STSMA. Common for tourism, events, construction, and government tender work. Recommended for most medium-sized businesses.
R20m+
High exposure
Large-scale contractors, industrial businesses, and major event organisers. Required by some government contracts and mining or infrastructure projects.

Important: The limit of indemnity must absorb both the compensation awarded to the claimant and all legal defence costs. A R5 million limit that is consumed by defence costs leaves less available for the actual claim. We assess the right limit based on your specific risk profile and contractual obligations.

Why use a broker

Getting the right policy, not just any policy

A public liability policy that does not match your actual operations is not worth the paper it is written on. Getting the scope, the extensions, and the limit right requires more than an online quote.

Correct operational scope

The policy must describe what your business actually does. A cleaning company doing electrical work on a site that is not disclosed may find the claim excluded. We ensure your operations are correctly declared.

Extension identification

Product liability, tenants liability, contractors liability, and pollution liability are not automatic inclusions. We identify which extensions your business needs and ensure they are written into the policy.

Limit adequacy review

We review your contractual obligations and risk exposure and advise on whether your current limit is adequate. An underinsured limit is as dangerous as no cover at all when a large claim lands.

Claims support

When a claim is lodged against your business, we liaise with the insurer and assessors on your behalf. Managing the process correctly from notification through to settlement protects your cover and reduces the impact on your business.

FAQs

Common questions about public liability insurance

Not for every business. Unlike motor insurance or certain professional registrations, there is no general legal requirement to hold public liability insurance in South Africa. However, it is practically required in many situations: commercial leases, subcontractor agreements, construction contracts, government tenders, and venue hire agreements routinely specify minimum limits. Body corporates are legally required to carry a minimum of R10 million under the STSMA. For most businesses that work with the public or at client premises, it is not optional in practice even if it is technically voluntary.

If an employee negligently injures a third party while acting within the scope of their employment, the business's public liability policy typically covers the resulting claim. The vicarious liability of an employer for an employee's negligent acts is a standard part of public liability cover. However, if the employee injures themselves, that is a COIDA matter, not a public liability claim. And if the employee acts outside the scope of their employment or commits an intentional act, cover may be excluded.

Public liability covers physical harm (bodily injury and property damage) caused by negligent business operations. Professional indemnity covers financial loss caused by errors, omissions, or negligent professional advice. A plumber who floods a client's property is a public liability claim. An accountant whose advice causes a financial loss is a professional indemnity claim. Many professional businesses need both: PI for the advice they give, and PL for the physical activities they carry out on client premises.

Not automatically. Product liability is typically a separate extension that must be added to the public liability policy. If your business makes, imports, or distributes physical products that could cause injury or damage, you need to confirm that product liability is specifically included in your policy wording. We check this as part of our policy review.

Public liability policies in South Africa typically operate on an aggregate basis, meaning the limit applies to all claims combined during the policy period. Once the limit is exhausted, the policy provides no further cover until renewal. Some policies also impose a per-occurrence sublimit, which caps the amount payable for any single incident. Legal defence costs are usually included within the limit, so a large defended claim can reduce the remaining limit available for compensation payouts.

Yes. Short-term or event-specific public liability cover is available and commonly used by event organisers, market traders, contractors on short-term projects, and businesses exhibiting at trade shows or expos. The cover period, event type, attendance numbers, and activities involved all influence the premium. For regular events or ongoing business activities, an annual policy is more cost-effective. We arrange both.

Get the right public liability cover for your business

Tell us what you do, where you operate, and what your contracts require. We will recommend the correct limit, identify the extensions you need, and place the policy with the right underwriter.