Nonprofit D&O Insurance
What It Covers, What It Doesn’t, and How to Protect Your Board

Index

Gordon B. Coyle
CEO, The Coyle Group
845-474-2924
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Executive Summary
A longtime board chair calls you on a Tuesday morning. She sounds rattled. A former employee just filed a wrongful termination lawsuit and named her personally in the complaint. She volunteered her time. She believed in the mission. Now her personal savings could be at risk.
This scenario plays out more often than most nonprofit leaders expect. If you’re an executive director, CFO, board chair, or treasurer, this guide gives you what you need: a plain-English explanation of nonprofit D&O insurance, a practical checklist for evaluating coverage, and the questions to ask your broker before your next renewal.
The Bottom Line (TLDR)
Nonprofit D&O insurance is essential board protection, not optional.
To evaluate your nonprofit’s protection.
What Is Nonprofit D&O Insurance?
Directors and Officers (D&O) insurance protects the individuals who lead your nonprofit (board members, officers, executives, and often employees and volunteers) when they’re accused of making mistakes in their governance roles.
What it pays for:
Who it protects:
Think of D&O as the safety net that lets talented people serve on your board without risking their personal financial security. Without it, qualified candidates increasingly decline board positions because they simply won’t accept the personal exposure.
Why Do Nonprofits Get Sued If They’re Doing Good Work?
The “good mission, real risk” reality catches many nonprofit leaders off guard. Passion for your cause doesn’t provide legal immunity.
Common Sources of Claims
The IRS recognizes approximately 1.8 million nonprofits in the United States. Every one of them faces potential governance liability, regardless of size, budget, or how noble the mission.
Real-World Claim Examples
Employment Claim ($133,000)
A nonprofit terminated a long-time employee after performance issues. The employee alleged wrongful termination and age discrimination. Settlement: $105,000. Defense costs: $28,000.
False Claims Act ($650,000+)
The Department of Justice sued a nonprofit for misrepresenting how government grant funds were used. Defense costs alone reached $250,000 before settling for $400,000.
Donor Misrepresentation ($175,000)
A foundation alleged that donations weren’t used for stated purposes. The organization incurred $175,000 in defense and settlement costs.
To discuss how claims like these affect your nonprofit.
Does Nonprofit D&O Protect Board Members Personally?
Yes, and this personal asset protection is precisely why D&O insurance exists.
When someone sues your nonprofit for governance decisions, they typically name:
Without D&O insurance, board members must defend themselves with their own money. Even if they ultimately “win,” legal defense costs can devastate personal finances. The median defense cost for employment claims exceeds $50,000 before any settlement.

Why “Volunteer” Status Doesn’t Prevent Lawsuits
Many board members assume the Federal Volunteer Protection Act of 1997 shields them completely. It doesn’t.
What the VPA actually does:
What the VPA does NOT do:
Even if the VPA defense ultimately succeeds, the nonprofit leader incurs substantial legal fees to prove they qualify for protection. D&O insurance fills this critical gap.
Isn’t This Covered by General Liability Insurance?
No. General liability and D&O insurance address completely different risks.
Why GL typically doesn’t respond to governance allegations:
Your general liability policy specifically excludes claims arising from how you manage the organization. If a former employee sues for wrongful termination, if a donor alleges misuse of funds, if a member challenges an election, GL won’t cover any of it.
You need both policies. They’re complementary protections for different categories of risk.
Is D&O Insurance Required for Nonprofits?
Legally required? Not typically. Most states don’t mandate D&O coverage for nonprofits.
Practically required? Increasingly, yes.
When D&O Becomes Effectively Mandatory
What 40+ Years Taught Me About This Risk
In four decades helping organizations navigate insurance decisions, I’ve watched the nonprofit landscape shift dramatically. Twenty years ago, D&O coverage was considered optional for smaller nonprofits. Today, I see organizations of all sizes facing claims that would have been unthinkable a generation ago. The question isn’t whether you can afford D&O insurance. It’s whether you can afford to lose your best board members or face a lawsuit without it.
What Does Nonprofit D&O Typically Cover?
Board Decisions and Governance Allegations
Coverage for claims alleging board members made poor decisions about organizational direction, strategy, or operations.
Examples: Approving a merger that harmed members, expanding into services outside the mission, closing programs despite donor expectations.
Fiduciary Duty Claims
Allegations that leaders breached their duty of care, duty of loyalty, or duty of obedience.
Examples: Failing to investigate financial irregularities, approving self-dealing transactions, deviating from organizational bylaws.
Mismanagement and Financial Oversight
Claims that leadership failed to properly manage organizational finances or assets.
Examples: Poor investment decisions, failure to maintain adequate reserves, negligent oversight of accounting practices.
Disclosure and Misrepresentation Claims
Allegations that the organization or its leaders misrepresented information to donors, members, or stakeholders.
Examples: Inaccurate fundraising appeals, misleading annual reports, false grant applications.
Regulatory Inquiry Defense (Policy Dependent)
Many nonprofit D&O policies include coverage for defense costs when regulators investigate the organization.
Examples: IRS audit defense, state attorney general inquiries, licensing board investigations.
Crisis PR Coverage (If Included)
Some policies provide sublimits for reputation management and crisis communications following a covered claim.
To discuss what your current policy actually covers.
What Does Nonprofit D&O Usually NOT Cover?
Understanding exclusions is as important as understanding coverage.
Fraud, Dishonesty, and Criminal Acts
D&O policies exclude coverage for intentional wrongdoing. However, the “final adjudication” language matters enormously.
Bodily Injury and Property Damage
These fall under general liability insurance, not D&O. If someone is physically hurt or property is damaged, your GL policy responds.
Prior Known Acts
Claims arising from situations leaders knew about before the policy started are typically excluded. This makes the “retroactive date” critical because it determines how far back coverage extends.
Certain Fines and Penalties
Regulatory fines and government penalties may be excluded, though defense costs for investigations are often covered. This varies by policy and jurisdiction (some states prohibit insuring certain penalties).
Professional Services
If your nonprofit provides professional services (counseling, medical care, legal aid), claims arising from those services require professional liability insurance, not D&O.

Side A, Side B, and Side C: Which Does a Nonprofit Need?
Most D&O policies include three “sides” of coverage. Understanding each helps you evaluate whether your policy actually protects your organization.
Side A: Individual Protection
What it does
Pays claims directly to individual directors and officers when the organization cannot or will not indemnify them.
When it triggers:
Why it matters
Side A is often called “personal asset protection” because it’s the coverage that protects board members’ homes, savings, and retirement accounts when the organization itself can’t help.
Side B: Corporate Reimbursement
What it does
Reimburses the nonprofit when it does indemnify its directors and officers.
Example
Your board chair is sued. The organization pays her defense costs per your bylaws. Side B reimburses the nonprofit for those expenses.
Why it matters
Protects organizational assets by transferring indemnification costs to the insurer.
Side C: Entity Coverage
What it does
Protects the nonprofit organization itself when it’s named in a lawsuit alongside directors and officers.
Why it matters for nonprofits
Plaintiffs’ attorneys almost always name the organization as well as individuals. Without Side C, the nonprofit has no coverage, only the individuals do.
What Nonprofits Actually Need
Most nonprofits should have all three sides. Here’s why:
Some specialized situations call for standalone “Side A only” or “Difference in Conditions” (DIC) policies, but these are typically for large organizations with complex exposures. For example, private funds have unique D&O considerations that differ from standard nonprofit coverage.
How Does Nonprofit D&O Interact with EPLI, Fiduciary Liability, and Professional Liability?
Nonprofits often need multiple management liability coverages. Understanding how they work together prevents gaps and overlaps.
Coverage Map for Nonprofit Leaders
One Claim Can Trigger Multiple Policies
Example: A nonprofit terminates an employee who then files a lawsuit alleging:
Multiple policies may respond to different aspects of the same underlying claim. This is why coordination matters because gaps between policies can leave critical exposures uninsured. Note that third party EPLI coverage protects against claims from non-employees like clients, vendors, or donors alleging harassment or discrimination.
Bundled vs. Unbundled Policies
Many carriers offer “Management Liability” packages that combine D&O, EPLI, Fiduciary, and sometimes Crime coverage. According to a recent Gallagher report, nonprofits should consider “unbundling” these coverages into separate policies, which can result in better coverage terms, lower retentions, and better premiums.

What Policy Wording Causes the Most Unpleasant Surprises?
These provisions can dramatically affect whether your policy pays when you need it.
“Insured vs. Insured” Exclusion
What it is
Excludes coverage when one insured person sues another insured person.
Why it matters for nonprofits
If your board has a contentious split and one faction sues another, coverage may be denied. Also relevant if the organization sues a former officer.
What to look for
Policies that carve out exceptions for whistleblower claims, employment disputes, and derivative suits brought in the organization’s name.
Definition of “Claim”
What it is
Determines exactly when coverage is triggered.
Why it matters
Some policies define “claim” narrowly (only formal lawsuits), while others include written demands, regulatory investigations, or informal requests for compensation.
What to look for
Broad definitions that trigger coverage early, before formal litigation begins.
Defense Inside vs. Outside the Limit
What it is
Determines whether legal defense costs reduce your available coverage limit.
Defense Inside the Limit
Your $1M policy pays defense costs AND settlements/judgments from the same $1M. A $500,000 defense means only $500,000 remains for settlement.
Defense Outside the Limit
Defense costs are separate from the policy limit. Your $1M remains fully available for settlements/judgments.
Why it matters
Defense-inside provisions are common and can dramatically reduce funds available for settlement, especially in protracted litigation.
Hammer Clause (Consent to Settle)
What it is
Determines what happens if the insurer wants to settle a claim but you refuse.
Hard hammer
If you decline a recommended settlement, the insurer caps their obligation at what the claim could have settled for. You pay everything above that amount.
Soft hammer
Costs above the settlement offer are shared (often 80/20 or 50/50).
No hammer
Insurer cannot settle without your consent, and they remain obligated for defense and judgment.
Why it matters
Accepting a settlement may feel like admitting wrongdoing. But refusing a reasonable settlement can leave you personally responsible for the excess.
Retroactive/Prior Acts Date
What it is
The date from which past acts are covered.
Why it matters
If your policy has a retroactive date of 2023, claims arising from decisions made in 2022 are excluded, even if the lawsuit is filed in 2024.
Critical for continuity
When switching carriers, ensure the new policy’s retroactive date matches your original coverage date. Gaps in continuity can leave years of decisions uninsured.
What’s a Retention and Why Do Nonprofits Have to Pay It?
Simple Definition
A retention (similar to a deductible) is the amount your organization pays out-of-pocket before insurance kicks in.
Why Retentions Exist
Retention vs. Self-Insured Retention (SIR)
For nonprofits: Deductibles are generally more manageable than SIRs because they don’t require immediate cash outlays during an already stressful claim.
Choosing the Right Retention
Most nonprofit policies offer retention options ranging from $0 to $25,000+. Lower retentions mean higher premiums, and vice versa.
Practical guidance
Choose a retention your organization can actually afford to pay if a claim occurs. A $10,000 retention saves premium but means nothing if you can’t write that check when needed.
What Does Nonprofit D&O Insurance Cost?
Typical Premium Ranges
Median cost: Approximately $855/year for $1 million in coverage
The premium typically ranges from 0.03% to 2% of the coverage limit, depending on organizational size, risk profile, and claims history.
Key Factors Affecting Cost
Market Conditions
According to industry reports, the nonprofit D&O market is showing mixed signals:
For your nonprofit’s specific situation.
How The Coyle Group Approaches Nonprofit D&O Insurance
We don’t simply sell policies. We build protection programs tailored to your organization’s actual governance risks.
Our Process
Why Nonprofit Experience Matters
Nonprofit D&O differs significantly from for-profit coverage. The claims drivers, regulatory environment, and funding structures create unique exposures that generalist brokers may miss.
We’ve worked with organizations ranging from small community groups to major regional nonprofits, understanding the nuances that affect coverage, pricing, and claims.
Questions About Nonprofit D&O Insurance?
Your Next Step
If you’re uncertain whether your current D&O coverage actually protects your board, it’s time for a clear assessment.
Most nonprofit leaders discover gaps they didn’t know existed: Side A limits that seem adequate until a bankruptcy scenario, employment exclusions that leave critical claims uncovered, or retroactive dates that exclude years of decisions.
95+
Years of Family Legacy in Insurance
40+
Years Personal Experience
95%
Client Retention Rate
600+
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To review your current protection and identify any gaps before a claim occurs.

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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