Second Opinion on Your Business Insurance

Find out if your business insurance is actually any good. Without shopping it.

You have that nagging feeling. You are not being paranoid.

Maybe you think you are paying too much. Maybe you are not sure your coverage would hold up if you had a bad claim. Maybe your broker went quiet somewhere along the way and now you only hear from them once a year, right before the bill shows up.

This is the Confidence Gap, and most business owners we talk to are living in it. They have doubts about their program or their broker, but no easy way to check.

Here is why nothing ever changes

The only way most owners know to answer the question “Is my insurance any good?” is to shop it. Call three brokers, hand over your information, fill out the applications, take the meetings, wait for the quotes. It is exhausting, it eats weeks, and it drags your current broker into a fight you may not even want.

So you do nothing. Another year goes by. The feeling stays.

There is a third option. One that answers the question honestly, without any of that.

This page walks you through what a real second opinion is, what it checks, what it costs, and how to get one without blowing up your current relationship.

You feel like something’s wrong, but you can’t name it. That is the whole problem, and it is not your job to name it. It’s ours. In my experience, business owners rarely overreact here. When your gut says the coverage or the price is off, it usually is. The Coyle Second Opinion is a paid, confidential review that pinpoints the gaps, the overcharges, and the fixes in plain English, without shopping your account or contacting your broker. Download the guide, or book a short call to see if you’re a fit.

What does a second opinion on your business insurance actually mean?

A second opinion on your business insurance is an independent expert reviewing your existing policies for gaps, overcharges, and bad wording, without trying to sell you the cheapest thing on the way in.

Here is the part most owners miss: a second opinion is not a quote. A quote shops your price. A review audits your protection. Those are two very different jobs, and confusing them is how people end up cheap and exposed at the same time.

In my experience, this distinction is everything. When you ask three agents to “quote it,” you get three prices for policies nobody actually read against your business.

When you ask for a real review, someone reads the limits, the exclusions, the endorsements, and the fine print, then tells you where you are exposed.

A proper second opinion looks at what you have, compares it to what your business actually does, and flags the difference.

That difference is where claims get denied.

  • A quote answers: “Can I pay less for something similar?”
  • A second opinion answers: “Does what I own actually protect me, and at a fair price?”

Both have a place. Only one keeps you out of trouble.

Why do so many owners quietly suspect something is wrong?

Because the warning signs are real and common: premiums climbing with zero claims, an agent who vanishes for eleven months and reappears with a bill, and “small” mistakes you only catch by accident. If you have felt this, trust it. What feels like a vague worry is usually a specific, fixable problem hiding under paperwork you were never taught to read.

I hear the same lines constantly.

“My small business insurance has increased 59% since 2022 with no claims.” “It feels like highway robbery.” These are not rare horror stories. They are on Tuesday.

What ties them together is a service failure, not a pricing accident.

When nobody proactively reviews your program, gaps and overcharges compound quietly until a claim or a renewal exposes them. You don’t know if a better alternative exists. That single sentence is why the review matters.

The owners who search for a second opinion on my business insuranceare almost never overreacting; they are noticing a real service gap. You cannot fix what nobody has shown you.

A second opinion turns the vague dread into a punch list.

Want that punch list for your policy? We will start with your current declarations pages.

A business owner reading a commercial insurance policy with a thoughtful and confused expression while seeking a Second Opinion On My Business Insurance.

What does it actually cost you to do nothing?

The cost of doing nothing is measured in denied claims and out-of-pocket losses, and the numbers are brutal. Hiscox research found that 75% of U.S. small businesses are underinsured. Here is the twist that should worry you more than the premium: being underinsured usually costs nothing right up until the day it costs everything. The bill arrives as a check you write yourself.

Consider what a single gap runs.

I have seen a company spend $140,000 on legal defense and settle a case entirely out of pocket because they had no EPLI.

I have seen a $340,000 cyber recovery bill land with the insurer paying nothing, because the policy had exclusions the owner never knew about.

Across 40 years, my number holds: 9 out of 10 business insurance policies we review contain at least one fatal flaw. Not a nitpick, a flaw that changes whether a real claim gets paid.

Silent gap we routinely find

What it can cost you

Crime sublimit stuck at the BOP default

Around $25,000 when your exposure is far higher

Cyber limit with quiet exclusions

Six-figure losses paid out of pocket

Missing auto physical damage coverage

Full replacement cost of a truck or trailer

No EPLI over 25 employees

$140,000+ to defend a single claim

The Small Business Administration flatly advises businesses to re-assess their insurance every year and fill any gaps in coverage as the business grows.

Doing nothing is a decision, and it is usually the expensive one.

Review your program before your next renewal locks the gaps in for another year.

What does a proper secondopinion review check?

A proper review checks every line of coverage against what your business actually does, not against a generic template. It reads limits, exclusions, deductibles, sublimits, endorsements, and named insureds line by line. The catch most owners never hear: the danger usually hides in the endorsements and the wording, not the big headline limit. That is exactly where a template quote never looks.

From what I’ve seen, the biggest exposures live in the details nobody reads.

A policy can show a healthy general liability limit and still fail you because of a single exclusion, a wrong classification, or a contract that required additional-insured wording you never added.

A real second opinion works down this list:

  • General liability limits, exclusions, and classifications
  • Property valuation, coinsurance, and sublimits
  • Business interruption limits and triggers (only 30% to 40% of small businesses carry it, per the NAIC)
  • Cyber limits, exclusions, and social engineering coverage
  • Workers’ compensation classifications and experience mod
  • Professional liability, EPLI, and umbrella limits
  • Commercial auto physical damage on every vehicle and trailer
  • Endorsements, retro dates, named insureds, and additional-insured wording
A professional insurance broker reviewing a detailed checklist of commercial insurance policies and endorsements during a Second Opinion On My Business Insurance evaluation.

The wording matters as much as the limit.

In one law firm’s policy, a review surfaced a buried authentication requirement, the kind of hidden clause nobody reads, that the insurer later leaned on to deny a $400,000 wire-fraud claim.

Each of these is a place where a claim quietly dies. We check all of them. See which of these apply to your operation.

What are the red flags that your policy is weak or mismatched?

The loudest red flag is a premium that keeps rising while your risk profile stays flat, with no explanation you can follow. Right behind it: an agent who cannot explain your own exclusions. Here is the pattern I want you to notice, because it predicts trouble better than price alone: the problem is almost never one giant mistake. It is several small ones nobody flagged in time.

In my experience, weak programs share a family resemblance.

Watch for these:

  • Coverages that appear and disappear between renewals with no conversation
  • A crime or cyber limit sitting at the default because nobody sized it to you
  • Certificates and additional-insured requests handled slowly or wrong
  • Classifications that no longer match what you actually do
  • A broker who “shops it every year” yet the price only goes up
  • Staff turnover on your account, so nobody knows your business

If you are nodding at three or more of these, you do not have a pricing problem.

You have a service problem, and the fix starts with an honest review.

If your gut says your broker is not doing enough, our guide on what your insurance broker should be doing lays out the standard you should expect.

Is your broker giving you neutral advice or a sales pitch?

Your current agent cannot give you a truly neutral second opinion on the policy they sold you, and that is not an insult, it is a conflict of interest. The uncomfortable truth: the person who built the program is the least able to see its blind spots. That is precisely why a second set of eyes, ideally an independent broker with access to many carriers, catches what the original never will.

There is a real difference between a captive agent tied to one company and an independent broker who can shop your risk across the whole market.

An independent broker is not defending last year’s decision. They are free to say, “This limit is wrong,” or “This exclusion should scare you.” Over 40 years, I have watched countless owners assume their agent was reviewing the program every year. Most were not.

The policy simply renewed, price crept up, and gaps went unspoken.

Real review, in practice.

When we reviewed a food products distributor’s program, we found $6 million to $7 million in property underinsurance, a gap that would have been catastrophic if a major loss had hit before we corrected the coverage to true replacement cost. The owner had no idea it was there. That is what a second opinion is for: catching the gap before a claim ever tests it.

A good reviewer earns your trust by showing you the gaps, not by trashing the other guy.

Judge us by what we find.

Can someone review your policy without replacing your agent?

Yes. You can get a full second opinion without firing anyone, signing anything, or tipping off your current agent. This is the fear that keeps most owners stuck, so let me be direct: a review is not a divorce. You are allowed to simply learn the truth about your coverage and then decide, on your timeline, what to do with it.

One business owner summed it up perfectly: “I don’t want to start calling around to other local agencies and have it get back to them, and this is really stressing me out.” I understand that completely.

A proper second opinion is confidential and pressure-free. We read your policies, we tell you what we find, and you keep every option open.

My goal is peace of mind without breaking the bank or disrupting your existing relationship.

Some owners take our findings straight back to their current agent and demand fixes. That is a win too. The point is that you finally know.

  • You keep your agent and use the findings to fix the gaps
  • You keep your agent but renegotiate from a position of knowledge
  • You switch only if the service gap is too big to ignore

Your policy, your call. Get a confidential look at your coverage.

When should you get a second opinion?

The best time is 90 days before renewal, and the second-best time is right after anything about your business changes. The trigger most owners miss: growth itself creates gaps. New trucks, new hires, new contracts, and new locations all quietly outrun a policy that was written for the smaller company you used to be.

From what I’ve seen, coverage goes stale faster than owners expect.

Hiscox found that 39% of businesses operating 10 or more years had never updated their general liability insurance.

That is a decade of change with a policy frozen in time.

Mark your calendar for these moments:

  • 90 days before renewal, so there is time to fix things
  • After revenue growth or adding employees
  • When you sign a contract that requires specific insurance
  • After buying vehicles, equipment, or property
  • When a lender or client demands proof of coverage

Timing matters because rushed renewals hide gaps.

For a fuller cadence, see our guide on how often you should review your business insurance, and what a broker should actually review at every renewal.

A business planning calendar highlighting important insurance review dates and renewal milestones for a Second Opinion On My Business Insurance.

Think of it like a second opinion from a specialist

When something serious shows up at the doctor, you do not immediately switch physicians and change your whole treatment plan. You get a second opinion. You bring your files to a specialist, they read them carefully, and they tell you what they see. Then the decision about what to do next is yours.

That is exactly what the Coyle Second Opinion is for your insurance. We are the specialist reading your films. We tell you the truth. We do not perform the surgery unless and until you decide you want us to.

What it is

  • A thorough, independent review of your current insurance program by a broker who has spent 44 years doing exactly this.
  • A plain-English explanation of what is working, what is not, and what it would cost to fix.
  • A written report you keep, whatever you decide to do next.
  • Completely confidential, conducted entirely inside our office.

What it is not

  • Not shopping. We do not go to the marketplace or solicit quotes.
  • Not a raid on your broker. We never contact them or your carriers. They will not know unless you tell them.
  • Not a sales pitch in disguise. You are paying for an honest opinion, not a proposal.

Why it’s paid: Because you pay for the opinion and not a policy, we have nothing to sell you at the end and no reason to tell you anything but the truth. That is exactly what makes it worth having.

What does a Coyle Second Opinion actually uncover?

A real review is not a glance at your declarations pages. This is diligence-level work, the same kind we learned auditing insurance programs for companies that private equity firms were about to acquire. Here is where the problems tend to hide.

Gaps, mistakes, and overlaps

Property values that are quietly wrong

Exposures nobody thought to insure

What your loss history is telling you

Whether your renewal is run or just processed

An insurance broker and business owner carefully reviewing commercial insurance policies together during a professional consultation for a Second Opinion On My Business Insurance.

What do you get?

You walk away with a written report you own. It includes:

  • A Coverage Gap Register. Every gap, mistake, and overlap, with the fix for each explained in plain English.
  • A Property and Business Income valuation check. Whether your values are defensible, and what they should be.
  • A loss history and risk control read. What your claims are telling you, plus specific risk control options.
  • A written renewal strategy playbook. The exact steps for a renewal that gets the right result, not just a new invoice.
  • Our honest read on pricing. A realistic sense of where the savings are, and where they are not.

Delivered in a live readout call where we walk you through everything and answer every question.

Is your program at risk? Take the 2-minute self-check

Answer honestly. Ten questions. We will show you what your score means, then you can download the full guide.

Who is the Coyle Second Opinion for?

It is built for mid-market business owners who have a real insurance program and want the truth about it. We work with clients across industries, including wholesalers and distributors, importers and DTC sellers, food and beverage manufacturers, manufacturers, life science companies, technology firms, and professional and financial services firms.

The right fit: you run a real insurance program (roughly $80k or more in annual premium), you have doubts about your coverage or your broker, and you want the truth without kicking off a shopping process. It is not a fit for brand-new or micro businesses that just need a basic policy.

How does it work?

  • Take the self-check above. Two or more "No" answers means a Second Opinion is worth your time.
  • Have a short conversation with us. We confirm you are a fit. No cost, no obligation.
  • Send us your documents: current policies, five years of loss runs, last three renewal proposals.
  • We do the work. Quietly, internally, confidentially. We never touch the market or your broker.
  • We deliver your report in a live readout and answer every question.
  • You decide what happens next. No step you are obligated to take.

What does the Coyle Second Opinion cost?

The Coyle Second Opinion is $2,500, a flat fee for the full review, the written report, and the live readout. Larger or more complex accounts are quoted individually.

Our guarantee: if you do not feel you got real value, we refund the fee in full.

You are not paying us to sell you a policy. You are paying for an honest opinion, which is exactly why it is worth having.

What happens after the review, stay, fix, or switch?

After the review you land in one of three places, and all three are wins because all three start from the truth. The outcome that surprises people: switching is the least common result. Most owners either fix the gaps with their current agent or renegotiate. Only a real service failure justifies moving your business.

Once you can actually see your program, the decision gets simple.

Here is the honest breakdown:

Your situation

The move

Coverage is close, service is fine

Stay and fix the specific gaps

Price or limits are off, agent will fix it

Renegotiate from knowledge

Repeated misses, no proactive service

Switch to a broker who shows up

If the review confirms your gut, our guide on the signs it may be time to switch brokers helps you decide, and it is worth understanding whether your business is underinsured before you renew again.

Whatever you choose, you choose it with open eyes. Ready for the truth about your program?

How to get the most out of your second opinion

To get a useful review, bring your full policies, not just the declarations page, and be candid about how your business has changed. The step owners skip: gathering the actual documents. A review built on a summary finds summary-level problems. A review built on the real policies finds the exclusions that matter.

In my experience, the best reviews start with the right paperwork.

Pull these together before we talk:

  • Current declarations pages for every policy
  • The full policy forms and endorsements, if you have them
  • Five years of loss runs, the standard lookback for claims history
  • Any contracts that dictate insurance requirements
  • A short list of how the business changed this year

Come with those, and the review moves fast and finds the real issues.

This page is one of several in our insurance advice library for business owners built to help you ask better questions before you sign.

Questions about the Coyle Second Opinion

It is an independent, expert review of your existing commercial insurance program. We analyze your coverage, values, loss history, and renewal strategy, then tell you in plain English what is working, what is missing, and what you may be overpaying for. We do not shop your insurance or contact your broker.

No. The entire review is confidential and conducted inside our office. We do not contact your broker, your carriers, or the marketplace. Nobody knows this happened unless you choose to tell them.

No. You own the report and you decide what to do with it. Many clients take the findings straight to their current broker and ask them to fix the issues. Others decide to bring us in at their next renewal. We are fine with either.

The Coyle Second Opinion is a flat $2,500 for the full review, written report, and live readout. Larger or more complex accounts are quoted individually. It comes with a satisfaction guarantee: if you do not feel you got real value, we refund the fee in full.

Complete copies of your current policies, five years of loss run history, and your last three renewal proposals. That is what lets us do real analysis instead of guesswork.

Shopping is a price exercise that pulls your broker into a bidding war and eats weeks of your time. A second opinion is a diagnosis. We are not trying to sell you a policy, so we have no reason to tell you anything but the truth about where your program actually stands.

Get the Right Coverage for Your Business

You have seen the warning signs, the silent gaps, and the red flags. The only question left is a simple one: where does your own business insurance actually stand?

Find out with the Coyle Second Opinion. We read your limits, exclusions, and pricing, then show you in plain English where you are exposed or overpaying. No shopping, and no need to leave your current agent to get the truth.

Download the guide, or book a short call, and you will walk away with a clear plan to stay, fix, or switch. It takes only a few minutes to finally feel confident that your business is covered.

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 the CEO of The Coyle Group, Gordon B. Coyle, CPCU, ARM, AMIM, PWCA, 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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  • Whether your current coverage matches your actual risks
  • If you're getting fair value for what you're paying
  • How your service experience compares to what's possible
  • What questions you should be asking but probably aren't

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  • The Coyle Group is 1st class! Gordon and his team are knowledgeable, responsive, and attentive to detail. Gordon is that rare breed of professional who genuinely cares for his clients and works hard to exceed their expectations. I highly recommend them.
    Jeff Carton
    Partner, Denlea & Carton, LLP
  • The insurance brokerage service was truly tailored to my needs, nothing like those big brokers who steer you toward random policies that don’t fit your profile. Thank you to the team for your help.
    Yohann Josselin
    Founder & Director, RankForge
  • I was working with another broker and having difficulty acquiring General Liability coverage. A colleague recommended The Coyle Group. They were able to get coverage bound in just a couple of business days and a policy issued in ten days, and with a solid carrier at a competitive premium. Truly impressive results, plus it was a pleasure working with them. I highly recommend the Coyle Group!
    Tim McCarthy
    Director of Operations, Dalmatian Company LLC
  • If any business is looking to work with an insurance brokerage firm that is not only excellent at what the firm does, but one that deeply values the needs of the clients, then The Coyle Group is the firm for you. Give them a call and see for yourself. I can assure that you will quickly agree.
    Dahiema Grant
    Accountant, DSG Advisory CPA

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