What is Marine Insurance?

Quick Answer

What Is Marine Insurance, and Does Your Current Business Policy Already Cover You?

Marine insurance covers physical loss or damage to ships, cargo, terminals, and any transport method used to move property between its origin and destination. Standard commercial property policies cover your business property at your listed location. For a full overview of how business insurance coverage is organized and where marine fits within it, our Insurance by Coverage hub covers the framework. The moment a shipment leaves your warehouse, is loaded onto a truck, or is transferred to a carrier, coverage under a standard property policy typically stops. This gap catches business owners off guard regularly, and it is the core problem that marine insurance solves. It is also one of the two big problems with business insurance that most owners only discover after a loss.

The Coverage Gap Most Businesses Don’t Know They Have

Standard business property policies exclude transit risks. Most businesses do not discover this gap until a loss occurs. If you import, export, ship domestically, or move equipment between locations, you have an uninsured exposure unless you have a marine policy in place.

“I thought my business insurance covered that shipment. It didn’t.” That is the most common thing we hear from business owners who contact us after a loss.

What Are the Three Main Types of Marine Insurance?

The three main types of marine insurance are Hull insurance (covering the physical vessel or transport equipment), Cargo insurance (covering goods in transit), and Liability insurance, also called Protection and Indemnity or P&I (covering third-party legal claims). Together these three types address every primary exposure in the marine risk spectrum: the physical asset, the cargo it carries, and the liability it creates.

1. Hull Insurance

Covers physical damage to the vessel, barge, aircraft, or equipment used to move cargo. Applies to commercial vessels, yachts, tugboats, and for inland marine, heavy equipment and specialty vehicles at job sites.

2. Cargo Insurance

Covers loss or damage to the goods themselves during transit. The most commonly purchased marine policy for importers, exporters, distributors, and manufacturers. It follows cargo from origin to destination regardless of which carrier handles it. Our dedicated post on ocean cargo insurance covers the specific coverage structures, valuation methods, and policy forms available for international cargo shipments.

3. Liability (P&I)

Protection and Indemnity covers legal obligations to third parties: crew injuries, collision liability, and pollution claims for ocean marine. For inland marine, this covers bailees liability and third-party property obligations. Our post on how much liability protection is enough covers the framework for sizing P&I limits correctly.

Beyond the core three, additional policy forms include Freight insurance (protecting shipping income), War Risk insurance (covering losses in conflict zones and piracy corridors including current Red Sea routes), and Loss of Hire insurance (compensating vessel owners for income lost during repairs).

Inland Marine vs. Ocean Marine Insurance: What Is the Difference?

Inland marine and ocean marine are both “marine insurance” but they cover fundamentally different risks. Inland marine has nothing to do with water despite its name. It covers property that is mobile in nature and moves over land. Ocean marine covers property on or transported by water. The distinction matters because the two policy forms are structured differently, priced differently, and governed by different bodies of law. The misconception that inland marine requires actual water exposure is one of the most common gaps in business coverage reviews.

Inland Marine vs. Ocean Marine at a Glance

Dimension

Inland Marine

Ocean Marine

Transport mode

Land (truck, train, rail, air)

Ocean, sea, waterways

What it covers

Movable property, equipment, tools in transit, property stored off-site

Vessel hull, cargo on ships, marine liability, Protection and Indemnity

Most common losses

Collisions, cargo theft

Water damage, collisions, piracy, weather events

Biggest misconception

Name suggests water but covers land transport only

Covers shipments during land and air stages of the voyage too

Typical users

Contractors, builders, equipment lessors, domestic shippers

Importers, exporters, manufacturers, freight forwarders, shipbuilders, marinas

Why Is It Called Marine Insurance If Inland Marine Has Nothing to Do with Water?

The term originated in the 17th century when merchant shippers wrote the first commercial insurance policies at Lloyd’s Coffee House in London to cover ocean voyages. As insurance evolved, the category expanded to include any property in motion, including over land. Inland marine for contractors and equipment has nothing to do with water. It inherited the “marine” classification from its historical origins in ocean shipping at Lloyd’s of London.

What Does Inland Marine Insurance Cover?

Inland marine insurance covers property that is mobile in nature, property in transit over land, and property that does not fit under a standard commercial property form. It is the correct coverage for any business whose assets move regularly or are entrusted to others. Standard property policies were not designed to follow property in motion. Inland marine was.

Common Inland Marine Coverage Types

  • Contractors Equipment floater – Covers backhoes, excavators, pavers, rollers, hand tools, and heavy equipment moving between job sites.
  • Builders Risk – Insures buildings and structures while under construction against fire, weather, theft, and accidental damage during the build.
  • Diagnostic and Medical Equipment – Covers CAT scan machines, MRI equipment, X-ray machines, and other high-value diagnostic equipment in transit or temporarily off-site.
  • Fine Arts floater – Covers artworks, sculptures, and collectibles in commercial buildings, galleries, and museums.
  • Jewelers Block – Covers the property of a jeweler both in transit and while in the store.
  • Bailees Coverage – Covers property belonging to others while in your care, custody, or control. Essential for dry cleaners, tailors, jewelers, and repair shops.
  • Cargo in transit – Covers goods being shipped by your vehicles or others’ vehicles, by rail, or by air from accidents, theft, and related perils. For distributors, our post on wholesalers and distributors insurance explains how cargo fits within the full distribution program. Manufacturers moving raw materials between facilities should also review our post on manufacturing insurance.

What Does Ocean Marine Insurance Cover?

Ocean marine insurance covers property transported by sea and the vessels that carry it. It is the oldest form of commercial insurance in existence and one of the most technically specialized. Gordon Coyle holds the AMIM (Associate in Marine Insurance Management) designation from the Insurance Institute of America, one of the most recognized credentials specific to marine insurance, reflecting deep technical knowledge of ocean marine policy forms, cargo valuation, P&I, and claims under maritime law. For businesses shipping goods internationally, our post on why businesses need international insurance coverage covers the broader context.

Ocean Marine Coverage Types

  • Hull and Machinery (H&M) – Covers physical damage to the vessel itself and its operating equipment.
  • Cargo Insurance – Covers loss or damage to goods while being transported by sea. A cargo owner who does not own the vessel still needs their own cargo policy.
  • Protection and Indemnity (P&I) – Marine liability coverage for crew injuries, pollution liability, and collision costs. Not included in hull policies; must be obtained separately.
  • Freight Insurance – Protects shipping income if cargo is not delivered due to a covered loss.
  • War Risk Insurance – Covers losses from acts of war, piracy, and terrorism. Standard ocean marine policies exclude war risk by default. Businesses shipping through the Red Sea or Gulf of Aden need a separate endorsement.
  • Loss of Hire Insurance – Compensates vessel owners for income lost when a ship is out of service due to insured damage.

In 2024 to 2025, several international insurers restricted or canceled war risk policies for Red Sea routes. Businesses shipping through these corridors need to verify war risk coverage before each shipment departs.

What Does Marine Insurance NOT Cover? Key Exclusions to Know

Marine insurance covers a broad range of transit and vessel risks, but every policy contains exclusions that can eliminate coverage in exactly the scenarios where business owners expect to be protected. Knowing the exclusions before a loss is the difference between a paid claim and a coverage dispute. This is the section of your policy that most brokers do not walk through with you before you bind coverage. A diagnostic insurance review surfaces these gaps systematically across your full program before a loss forces the discovery.

  • Wear and tear and gradual deterioration – Damage from normal use, aging, or lack of maintenance is not covered.
  • Inherent vice – Losses from a product’s own natural characteristics (perishable goods spoiling without an external cause) are excluded.
  • Improper packaging – Damage from inadequate packing is not covered. One of the most frequent claim denial reasons in cargo insurance.
  • Delay-only losses – Financial losses caused purely by late arrival, without physical damage, are excluded under most marine forms.
  • War, piracy, and political risk – Standard ocean marine policies exclude war risk by default. Businesses shipping through conflict zones need a separate war risk endorsement.
  • Willful misconduct and gross negligence – Deliberate acts or reckless disregard for safety void coverage.

Important: All-Risks vs. Named Perils

Many businesses assume they purchased “all-risks” coverage when they actually have a named perils form. Under Institute Cargo Clause A (all-risks), all physical damage from external causes is covered unless excluded. Under Clause C (named perils), only specific listed perils apply. Confirm which clause your cargo policy is written on before a shipment departs.

The Biggest Mistakes Businesses Make with Marine Insurance

The most expensive marine insurance problems are almost never caused by the wrong perils being covered. They are caused by claims being denied because of how the insured handled the shipment, reported the loss, or structured the policy. Understanding these mistakes before a loss occurs is the difference between a paid claim and a coverage dispute.

Top Mistakes That Lead to Claim Denials

Mistake

Why It Happens

Consequence

Delaying loss notification

Waiting to assess damage before contacting insurer

Claim rejected; insurers require prompt reporting

Documentation errors

Incomplete bills of lading, missing invoices, poor photos

Many claims denied due to paperwork failures alone

Improper packaging

Using inadequate materials for transit

Claims rejected when damage results from poor packing

Wrong policy type

Assuming one policy covers all damage types

Mismatched coverage means no payout

Expecting all-risks coverage

Misunderstanding policy language (Clause C vs. Clause A)

Claims reduced or rejected when exclusions apply

Underinsuring cargo value

Not understanding insured value calculation

Can only recover up to insured value; shortfall is owner’s loss

Real Example: Importer Settles at 60 Cents on the Dollar

An importer of precision manufacturing parts received a container with water damage to roughly 30% of the goods. The damage was clearly caused by a hold flood during a storm. The insurer initially denied the claim because the importer waited 12 days to notify them, the photos were taken after partial unpacking, and the packaging invoice was missing. After a lengthy dispute, the claim settled at 60 cents on the dollar. Proper notification and documentation would have resulted in full recovery. Understanding risk transfer and indemnity agreements in the context of your carrier and freight forwarder relationships is also essential for knowing which party’s policy responds first.

What to Do When You Have a Marine Insurance Claim

Marine insurance claims require prompt action and precise documentation. The businesses that recover their full losses are the ones that treat a claim as a time-sensitive, document-intensive process from the moment they discover a loss, not from the moment they finish unpacking.

Six Steps to Take Immediately After a Marine Loss

Steps 1-2

1. Notify your insurer immediately. Most marine policies require notification within 24 to 72 hours. Do not wait to assess the full extent of damage.

2. Preserve all documentation. Bill of lading, commercial invoice, packing list, and all shipping records must be secured immediately.

Steps 3-4

3. Photograph everything in situ. Take photos of the damage before any unpacking or movement of goods. Post-unpacking photos create disputes about when damage occurred.

4. Request a survey. Do not agree to disposal, repair, or salvage before the independent surveyor completes their assessment unless you have explicit written insurer approval. For a broader view of how marine fits within your overall risk management strategy, our post on the strategic risk process explains how different coverage lines connect.

Steps 5-6

5. File a claim against the carrier. Even if your marine insurer will pay, filing against the carrier preserves subrogation rights. Failure to do this can reduce your recovery.

6. Keep a complete timeline. Document every communication, action, and expense. This record is essential if the claim is disputed or subrogation recovery is pursued.

What Does Marine Insurance Cost?

Marine insurance cost depends on the type of coverage, the nature and value of the property being insured, how and where it moves, and the claims history of the insured. The premium range is wide because the exposures are wide. For small businesses and contractors, inland marine coverage typically runs $500 to $3,000 per year. Ocean marine cargo insurance typically runs $0.10 to $0.75 per $100 of cargo value depending on the commodity, route, and coverage structure.

Key Cost Factors for Ocean Marine

Factor

Lower Cost

Higher Cost

Cargo type

Non-perishable, non-fragile goods

Electronics, perishables, liquids

Trade route

Stable, low-piracy zones

Red Sea, Gulf of Aden, high-risk corridors

Packing quality

Proper commercial packaging

Inadequate or informal packing

Coverage breadth

Named perils (Clause C)

All-risks (Institute Cargo Clause A)

Prior claims

No claims history

Recent or frequent claims

Questions About Marine Insurance?

Inland marine covers property that moves over land, including contractors equipment, cargo on trucks and trains, and property stored off-site. It has nothing to do with water. Ocean marine covers property transported by sea, including vessel hulls, cargo in international trade, and marine liability. The two types require separate policy forms and are governed by different legal frameworks.

In most cases, no. Standard commercial property policies cover your business property at the specific locations listed on the policy. The moment goods are in transit, whether in your own vehicle or a carrier’s, coverage under a standard property policy typically stops. You need a separate inland marine or ocean marine policy to cover property while it is moving.

Cargo insurance covers loss or damage to your goods while they are being shipped. The carrier’s insurance covers their liability, not the full value of your goods. Carrier liability is often limited by contract and by law to amounts far below the actual value of the shipment. Every business that ships goods of significant value should carry its own cargo insurance, separate from what the carrier provides.

Protection and Indemnity is the marine liability coverage for vessel owners. It covers medical bills for injured crew, legal expenses from third-party claims, oil pollution liability, and collision liability when your vessel damages another vessel or property. P&I is typically obtained through a P&I Club or the standard marine market. It is not included in a hull policy and must be obtained separately.

An “all-risks” marine cargo policy (written under Institute Cargo Clause A) covers all physical loss or damage from any external cause, unless specifically excluded. This is broader than a named perils policy (Clause B or C), which only covers listed perils. Most commercial cargo shippers should carry Clause A coverage to minimize claim disputes over whether a specific cause of loss is covered.

General average is a maritime law principle under which all cargo interests aboard a vessel share proportionally in a deliberate loss made to save the voyage. If you have cargo insurance, your policy handles general average contributions on your behalf. Without cargo insurance, you are personally responsible for your share of a general average claim before your goods are released from the vessel.

For small businesses and contractors, inland marine coverage typically runs $500 to $3,000 per year. Ocean marine cargo insurance typically runs $0.10 to $0.75 per $100 of cargo value. A small importer with $1 million in annual cargo value might pay $1,500 to $7,500 per year depending on how the policy is structured. Our post on shopping for business insurance covers how to evaluate coverage options systematically across markets. War risk endorsements have increased significantly in 2024 to 2025 due to Red Sea disruptions. Importers who carry ocean marine cargo coverage often also need product recall insurance for goods sourced from overseas manufacturers.

Gordon Coyle holds the AMIM (Associate in Marine Insurance Management) designation from the Insurance Institute of America. This is a specialized technical credential specific to marine insurance, covering policy forms, international cargo clauses, Protection and Indemnity, hull valuation, and claims under maritime law. The Coyle Group has structured marine programs for importers, distributors, manufacturers, and construction firms across multiple industries, including Lloyd’s of London specialty markets for complex risks. For businesses bringing goods from overseas, our post on importer insurance covers how marine fits within the full import program.

About the Author

This article was written by Gordon B. Coyle, CPCU, ARM, AMIM, PWCA, CEO of The Coyle Group, who has over 40 years of experience working with business owners of all sizes and industries across the US, solving their insurance challenges.

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