Life Sciences Insurance
What You Need Now, What You’ll Need Next, and How to Buy It Without Overpaying

Index

Gordon B. Coyle
CEO, The Coyle Group
845-474-2924
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Executive Summary
Life sciences risk is not “office risk.” One clinical trial adverse event, one product recall, or one data breach can become a seven-figure problem overnight.
If your company develops drugs, medical devices, diagnostics, or digital health products, you need insurance designed for the specific exposures you face. This guide covers the complete insurance stack for life sciences companies, from preclinical startups to commercial-stage enterprises.
The Bottom Line (TL;DR)
Investment Range:
To discuss your life sciences insurance needs.
What Does “Life Sciences Insurance” Actually Mean?
Life sciences insurance is not a single policy. It is a coordinated stack of coverages designed to address the unique exposures biotech, pharma, medical device, and digital health companies face throughout their product lifecycle.
The Three Risk Buckets (Plain English):
Standard business insurance cannot adequately cover these exposures. Generic policies contain exclusions that leave life sciences companies exposed precisely when they need protection most.
Why Life Sciences Companies Get Surprised by Insurance Gaps
The core problem is that fast growth, investor requirements, and clinical milestones outpace most founders’ understanding of insurance needs.
What 40+ Years Taught Me About This Risk
In my four decades helping companies navigate insurance challenges, I have seen the same pattern repeatedly: founders assume their existing coverage handles everything until a claim reveals painful gaps. The companies that avoid this trap treat insurance as a strategic function, not an administrative afterthought.
The Five Most Common Insurance “Surprises”
1. GL Excludes Clinical and Product Specifics
Standard general liability insurance contains exclusions for clinical trials and specific product liability scenarios. Many founders discover this only after an incident.
2. D&O Is Not “Later”
Fundraising triggers D&O insurance requirements immediately. Investors and board members will not serve without it. Waiting until Series A to purchase D&O is too late.
3. Clinical Trials Require Specialized Wording
Ethics committees and hospital IRBs require specific policy language. According to FDA requirements, trial sponsors must demonstrate adequate insurance coverage before approval.
4. Vendor Contracts Demand Endorsements
You May Not Have CROs, CDMOs, and hospital partners require specific insurance exhibits. Missing “additional insured” or “waiver of subrogation” language delays deals for weeks.
5. Cyber/Data Obligations Outpace Coverage
Patient data, clinical trial information, and proprietary IP create exposures that basic cyber insurance may not fully address. HIPAA compliance alone is insufficient.
What Insurance Do Life Sciences Companies Need?
Which Coverages Matter Most for Your Business Type?
If You’re a Biotech Company (Preclinical/Clinical)
Top Priorities:
If You’re a Medical Device Company
Top Priorities:
If You’re Diagnostics/Lab Services
Top Priorities:
If You’re a CRO or CDMO
Top Priorities:
If You’re Digital Health / SaMD (Software as Medical Device)
Top Priorities:
Not sure which bucket you’re in?
To map your specific coverage needs.
What Changes as You Move from Preclinical to Clinical to Commercial?
Preclinical Stage (Before Humans)
“Minimum Viable Stack”:
Key Considerations:
Clinical Stage (Humans Involved)
Additional Requirements:
Key Considerations:
Commercial Stage (Selling Product)
Expanded Requirements:
Key Considerations:
What Do Investors, Partners, CROs, and Hospitals Typically Require on a COI?
Certificate of Insurance (COI) requirements are where deals get delayed. Understanding what third parties require prevents contract holdups.
Common COI Requirements
COI Readiness Checklist

Why Deals Get Delayed:
CROs, CDMOs, and hospital partners have insurance requirements baked into their standard contracts. If your coverage cannot provide the required endorsements, contract execution stalls for weeks while you scramble to upgrade coverage.
Real Claim Examples: Which Policy Responds?
Real-World Example: Clinical Trial Adverse Event
A mid-stage biotech company conducting a Phase II trial experienced a serious adverse event requiring hospitalization of a trial participant. The investigation took 8 months.
Without Proper Coverage:
With Clinical Trial Liability:
How Much Coverage Should You Buy (Limits) at Each Stage?
Framework for Setting Limits
Typical Starting Points by Stage
When Umbrella/Excess Makes Sense:
Umbrella policies provide additional limits over underlying GL, auto, and employers liability. When contract requirements exceed your primary policy limits, umbrella coverage is more cost-effective than increasing primary limits.
Retentions/Deductibles:
Higher retentions reduce premium but require capital reserves. A $25,000 retention on cyber versus a $5,000 retention could save 15-20% on premium but requires planning for that out-of-pocket exposure.
What Drives the Cost of Life Sciences Insurance?
How to Lower Costs
What Exclusions and “Gotchas” Should You Watch For?
Common Policy Pitfalls
Simple Rule: If it is in your contract, make sure it is in your policy wording.
What Do Underwriters Ask For (Quote-Ready Checklist)?
Having these materials ready accelerates the quoting process from weeks to days.
Documentation Required

How to Buy Life Sciences Insurance Without Wasting Money
The Three-Step Plan
Step 1: Map Your Model + Stage
Identify what exposures you truly have based on your current operations and near-term milestones. Do not buy coverage for risks you do not face yet.
Step 2: Match Policies to Contracts + Milestones
Ensure your coverage meets COI requirements for partners, investors, and customers. Build in coverage for milestones you expect to hit within the policy term.
Step 3: Stress-Test Limits + Wording
Review policy language against realistic claim scenarios. Confirm your coverage actually responds when you need it.
Common Buying Mistakes to Avoid
When Should You Talk to a Specialist Broker?
Trigger Events
What a Specialist Broker Actually Does
Your Next Step
Stop guessing whether your coverage actually protects you.
Schedule a 20-Minute Coverage Map Call
Walk us through your company stage, upcoming milestones, and current coverage. We will identify gaps and provide a clear Good/Better/Best recommendation tailored to your situation.
Request a Quote
If you already know what you need, send us your information and we will return quotes from carriers who actually understand life sciences risk.
We respond within one business day. Your science is too important to leave unprotected.
Questions about Life Sciences Insurance?
Why Life Sciences Companies Choose The Coyle Group
Most brokers treat life sciences insurance like standard business coverage. They quote generic policies, miss critical exclusions, and leave you scrambling when a CRO contract demands endorsements your policy cannot provide.
We take a different approach.
95+
Years of Family Legacy in Insurance
40+
Years Personal Experience
95%
Client Retention Rate
600+
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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 United States, solving their insurance challenges. Gordon specializes in helping life sciences companies, including biotech startups, medical device manufacturers, and pharmaceutical firms, develop comprehensive insurance programs that protect their operations and support their growth from preclinical through commercial stages.
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