What Does D&O Insurance Not Cover?

The Exclusions Every Director and Officer Needs to Know

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If you sit on a board or hold an executive title, you have probably heard that D&O insurance is what protects you personally if something goes wrong. That is mostly true. But there is a long list of situations where your D&O policy will not respond, and most executives only find out about those situations after a claim is denied.

This article is about that list.

TL;DR. Executive Summary

What does D&O insurance not cover? The major exclusions include: fraud and criminal acts once guilt is established, bodily injury and property damage, claims arising from professional services rendered, prior wrongful acts before the retroactive date, pollution liability, employment practices claims when a separate EPLI policy exists, and insured vs. insured disputes.

Each of these exclusions has carve-backs and negotiation levers that a skilled broker can work with. Without that work, the gaps in your program can be extremely expensive.

The Coyle Group has reviewed hundreds of D&O programs for private companies, nonprofits, and boards of every size. What we see consistently is that most directors and officers carry coverage they believe is comprehensive. It is not. Understanding what your policy excludes is just as important as knowing what it covers.

What Does D&O Insurance Not Cover and Why Do These Exclusions Exist?

D&O insurance is a management liability policy, built to protect individuals in their capacity as directors and officers from personal financial loss when someone sues them over decisions they made in that role. But insurers never designed it to serve as a blanket protection policy for every problem a business encounters. They created these exclusions because other insurance products, including general liability, professional liability, and EPLI, cover those specific exposures.

To understand the exclusions, it helps to know what D&O does cover at its core:

  • Defense costs for claims alleging a wrongful act in a management or governance capacity
  • Shareholder suits, derivative actions, and breach of fiduciary duty claims
  • Regulatory and government investigation costs, including SEC subpoenas and inquiries
  • Employment-related claims against individual officers when EPLI is not carried separately
  • Personal asset protection when the company cannot or will not indemnify its directors and officers

Here is why the exclusions still matter

If your D&O policy covered everything, it would duplicate coverage you are already paying for elsewhere, and the premiums would reflect that. The exclusions create boundaries between D&O and the rest of your insurance program. The problem is that those boundaries are not always clean. Without an experienced broker reviewing the wording, gaps appear exactly where you least expect them.

The exclusions that matter most fall into these categories:

Bodily Injury and Property Damage Exclusions in D&O Insurance

Each one is addressed in detail below. Keep reading, because the nuance within each category is where the real risk lives.

Most directors believe their D&O program is solid. Most are wrong about at least one of the nine exclusion categories on this page.

Does D&O Insurance Cover Fraud and Criminal Acts Against Executives?

D&O insurance provides no coverage for fraud, criminal acts, or personal profit once guilt has been established through a final adjudication or written admission. But the nuance that most executives miss is that defense costs are typically paid throughout the investigation and litigation process, and coverage is only stripped back after a final, non-appealable ruling establishes that the act actually occurred.

That distinction is critical. Most D&O claims involving fraud allegations never reach a final adjudication. If someone accuses an executive of fraud, D&O coverage may still respond if the case settles, gets dismissed, or ends in a civil finding instead of a criminal conviction, depending on how the policy is written. According to NERA Economic Consulting’s 2024 Full-Year Securities Litigation Review, average settlements in resolved securities class actions reached $43 million in 2024, a figure that makes the coverage of defense costs throughout the litigation process, not just at resolution, one of the most financially significant features of any D&O policy.

The specific exclusions in this category include:

  • Fraud and dishonest acts: Claims arising from fraudulent, dishonest, or intentionally wrongful conduct are excluded, but typically only after a final adjudication or written admission of guilt. Before that threshold, defense coverage continues.
  • Criminal acts: Loss from criminal acts or deliberate law-breaking by an insured person is not covered. Defense costs generally continue until there is a final, non-appealable adjudication.
  • Illegal remuneration and personal profit: Claims based on an insured gaining illegal compensation, personal profit, or financial advantage to which they were not legally entitled are excluded.
  • Intentional misconduct and willful violations: Intentional acts designed to cause harm, or willful violations of law or statute, are excluded beyond the adjudication threshold.
  • Fines, penalties, and punitive damages: Many policies exclude civil fines, penalties, and punitive or exemplary damages to the extent they are uninsurable by law.

The practical question executives and business owners ask is

“If my CEO is accused of fraud but not convicted, does D&O respond?” In most cases, yes, the policy pays defense costs through that process. What it will not do is pay a settlement based on a proven finding of deliberate fraud.

This is not a reason to skip D&O. It is a reason to have a specialist review the exact adjudication language in your policy, because how “final” is defined, and whether carve-backs exist for innocent co-defendants, varies significantly by carrier and form.

Why Does D&O Insurance Exclude Bodily Injury and Property Damage?

Bodily injury and property damage are excluded from D&O because those exposures belong under general liability and employers’ liability policies. But this exclusion surprises directors more than almost any other, because it can apply even when the underlying claim is really about governance, not physical harm.

Here is the scenario that catches boards off guard

A manufacturing company has an industrial accident. Regulators and employees allege that the executive team failed to implement adequate safety protocols, and they sue the directors personally for that failure. The underlying event involves physical injury. The D&O insurer may argue that the claim is excluded because it arises out of bodily injury, even though the allegation against the directors is a governance failure.

The key provisions in this exclusion include:

  • Bodily injury: Claims “for” bodily injury, sickness, disease, or death are generally excluded from D&O and aligned to general liability or employers’ liability.
  • Property damage: Claims “for” physical injury to or destruction of tangible property are excluded for the same reason.
  • Limited carve-backs: Many modern D&O forms restore coverage where a bodily injury allegation is part of a securities claim, a mismanagement allegation, or a wrongful act claim, such as misrepresentation to investors about workplace safety. The carve-back covers the governance dimension of the claim, not the underlying physical harm.
  • Catastrophe and mass torts: Product liability, professional malpractice causing injury, or large construction losses are typically excluded through both the BI/PD and professional services language.
Key D&O Insurance Exclusions Executives Need to Review

The specific word used in this exclusion matters significantly. A policy that excludes claims “for” bodily injury is narrower and more favorable to the insured than one that excludes claims “arising out of” bodily injury. The second version can sweep in governance claims that happen to be connected to a physical incident. That is a material difference in coverage that requires a specialist to identify and negotiate.

Your D&O policy uses either “for” or “arising out of” language in the bodily injury exclusion. That single word determines whether a governance claim survives a denial.

Are Prior Acts and Pending Lawsuits Covered Under D&O Insurance?

D&O is a claims-made policy. Coverage applies to claims made during the policy period, not necessarily when the underlying act occurred.

This structure creates two categories of important exclusions:

  • Prior Acts (wrongful acts that happened before the policy’s retroactive date)
  • And Prior Pending Litigation (lawsuits already in motion before coverage was bound).

For executives taking over a company, joining a new board, or buying a business through an acquisition, these exclusions represent some of the most dangerous gaps in any D&O program.

The key provisions include:

  • Prior acts exclusion and retroactive date: Claims arising from wrongful acts committed before the policy’s retroactive date are excluded. If your policy has a retroactive date of January 1 of the current year, anything that happened before that date is not covered, regardless of when the claim is filed.
  • Prior or pending litigation: Claims arising out of litigation or proceedings that were pending before a stated date are excluded. If a lawsuit was already filed against a company before the policy was bound, it will not be covered under that policy.
  • Known circumstances and late notice: Claims or circumstances known before policy inception but not disclosed to the insurer are commonly excluded. If a director knew a lawsuit was likely but did not disclose it at application, the insurer can deny coverage.

For companies going through a merger or acquisition, this exclusion creates a specific and underappreciated problem. When a deal closes, the seller’s D&O policy typically ends shortly after. Claims arising from pre-close decisions will be made against the new ownership structure. Without proper tail coverage or prior acts coverage negotiated into the buyer’s new policy, those pre-close exposures are uncovered.

In my experience reviewing acquisition-related insurance programs, this is one of the most consistently missed items in post-close insurance stacks. The buyer builds new coverage and assumes the seller’s tail handles everything from before the close. That assumption is often wrong, and it is expensive to find out after a claim is filed.

Does D&O Insurance Cover Claims from Professional Services Rendered?

Professional services claims are excluded from D&O and belong under separate errors and omissions (E&O) or professional indemnity (PI) policies. This exclusion exists because professional services liability is a distinct exposure with its own underwriting criteria, risk profile, and specialized market.

But this creates real confusion for executives at professional services firms, specifically lawyers, accountants, consultants, investment advisors, engineers, and medical professionals who also serve on boards. They often assume D&O will pick up claims their E&O policy does not cover. That assumption is frequently wrong, and the gap between the two policies can be significant.

The provisions in this exclusion include:

  • Professional services exclusion: Claims arising from the rendering or failure to render professional services, including legal, accounting, consulting, investment advisory, medical, and engineering work, are excluded from D&O so they sit under separate E&O or PI policies.
  • Contractual liability: Claims based solely on an insured’s obligations under a contract, such as a pure breach of contract or indemnity clause, may be excluded. Carve-backs may apply where the insured would have had liability absent the contract.
  • Cyber and technology perils: Many D&O policies exclude cyber events, data breaches, and network security claims and push those into dedicated cyber policies. However, a separate claim that the board failed to exercise proper governance oversight of cyber risk may still be covered under D&O even if the underlying breach is excluded.
Main Categories of D&O Insurance Exclusions

The line between professional services and governance decisions can be thin. A CEO who also serves as an investment advisor and is sued for both poor investment management and breach of fiduciary duty to the board may find the claim split between E&O and D&O, or denied by both if the wording creates a gap. This is why having both policies reviewed by the same broker, coordinated to eliminate seams, is not optional for professional services firms.

The gap between D&O and E&O is where the most expensive claims fall through. If you lead a professional services firm and sit on a board, both policies need to be reviewed together, not in isolation.

How Does Employment Practices Liability Affect What D&O Insurance Covers?

Employment practices claims are one of the most common sources of confusion about what does D&O insurance not cover. A standalone D&O policy provides limited coverage for employment-related claims. When a separate EPLI policy exists, the D&O typically contains a specific employment practices exclusion to avoid overlap and push those claims to EPLI. The result is that executives assume one policy or the other covers an employment claim against them personally. If the policies are not properly coordinated, both carriers can deny.

Here is how the split works in practice:

  • Employment practices under basic D&O: Off-the-shelf D&O often gives limited coverage for employment-related claims against individual insured persons, but excludes claims against the entity itself unless EPLI is added.
  • When separate EPLI exists: The D&O typically excludes EPL-type claims including wrongful termination, discrimination, harassment, and retaliation, and pushes them into the standalone EPLI policy.
  • Claims that mix governance and employment: Derivative suits involving HR failures, or claims where securities issues intersect with employment allegations, may receive partial D&O carve-backs. Pure HR disputes are usually excluded.
  • ERISA and employee benefit plans: U.S. D&O commonly excludes fiduciary liability under ERISA. That exposure requires separate fiduciary liability coverage.

Real-World Example

A mid-sized company receives a class action suit alleging that the board approved an executive compensation structure that discriminated against female employees. The EPLI insurer argues this is a governance failure covered by D&O. The D&O insurer argues it is an employment practices matter covered by EPLI. Both carriers initially decline to defend. The company spent six figures in legal fees before the coverage dispute was resolved.

This scenario plays out regularly when EPLI and D&O are placed with different carriers and no one reviews the combined language for gaps. The Coyle Group structures these programs as a coordinated package to prevent exactly this kind of outcome.

The solution is not to buy more coverage. It is to have a broker who reviews both policies together and closes the seam between them before a claim happens.

Does D&O Insurance Cover Pollution, Cyber, and Other Specialty Risks?

Several specialty exposures are excluded from almost every D&O policy, including pollution liability, cyber events, and in some cases antitrust and intellectual property claims. These exclusions exist because each of these exposures has a dedicated insurance market with specialized underwriting, pricing, and policy terms that D&O was never designed to address.

The most important exclusions in this category include:

  • Pollution exclusion: Claims arising from pollution, contamination, or environmental damage, including clean-up costs, are standard D&O exclusions. Limited carve-backs may exist where the claim involves misrepresentation to investors about environmental issues or failure to supervise, but those carve-backs do not cover the underlying environmental liability itself.
  • Cyber and technology events: Most D&O policies exclude claims arising from data breaches, cyber attacks, or network security failures and push those into dedicated cyber policies. A separate claim that the board failed to provide adequate governance oversight of the company’s cyber risk program may still be covered under D&O. The cyber event is excluded; the governance failure around it may not be.
  • Intellectual property and antitrust: Some D&O forms exclude IP infringement or antitrust and competition claims entirely, or limit them through sublimits.
  • War, terrorism, and nuclear: Standard market exclusions apply for war, terrorism, nuclear contamination, and similar catastrophic perils.

The cyber governance question is increasingly relevant for every board. Directors and officers are regularly named in shareholder suits and regulatory actions following major data breaches, with claimants alleging that the board failed to take adequate steps to manage cyber risk. Whether D&O covers that governance dimension depends entirely on the specific policy language. It is worth having a specialist review the wording before an incident forces the question.

If your board oversees a company with significant cyber, environmental, or antitrust exposure, contact us to review how your D&O policy handles the governance side of those risks.

What Is the Insured vs. Insured Exclusion in D&O Insurance?

The insured vs. insured exclusion prevents D&O from covering claims brought by one insured against another insured. The exclusion exists to prevent collusive suits designed to extract insurance money from the carrier. But this exclusion has important carve-backs that most policyholders do not know to ask for, and those carve-backs can be the difference between coverage and a denial in several common scenarios.

The basic rule

If a director, officer, or the company entity sues another insured, the claim is excluded. The concern is that a company could manufacture a claim against its own executives to fund a recovery from the D&O policy.

But standard carve-backs restore coverage for:

  • Derivative suits: Claims brought by or on behalf of shareholders, rather than by the company itself, are typically carved back in because they represent shareholders’ interests, not the company’s.
  • Bankruptcy trustees and receivers: Claims brought by a bankruptcy trustee, receiver, or creditors’ committee are often carved back because those parties represent creditors, not the company.
  • Whistleblower claims: Some policies carve in claims brought by former employees acting as whistleblowers.
  • Former directors and officers: Claims brought by former directors or officers after a specified separation period may also be carved back in.

For private equity-backed companies and portfolio companies with complex ownership structures, the insured vs. insured exclusion requires careful attention. When a PE sponsor sits on the board and the portfolio company later sues the board for decisions made during the holding period, whether that suit is excluded as insured vs. insured or covered as a derivative action can be worth millions of dollars. The carve-back language in the policy determines the outcome.

What Does D&O Insurance Not Cover During Bankruptcy or Financial Distress?

Bankruptcy and financial distress scenarios create some of the most complex D&O coverage questions. At the precise moment executives most need the protection of D&O insurance, creditors, trustees, and other parties are initiating claims that can run directly into the exclusions described above.

The specific concerns in insolvency scenarios include:

  • Creditor exclusion: Some D&O policies, particularly smaller or budget-priced forms, exclude claims brought by creditors over unpaid debts or bankruptcy-related issues.
  • Insolvency and the insured vs. insured exclusion: When a bankruptcy trustee takes over a company and sues the former directors, whether that is a covered claim or an excluded insured vs. insured claim depends entirely on how the carve-backs are written in the specific policy form.
  • Side A coverage adequacy: When the company is insolvent and cannot indemnify its directors and officers, Side A coverage becomes critical because it pays the individual directly without requiring company indemnification first. If Side A limits are inadequate, executives face personal financial exposure at exactly the moment the company can no longer protect them.
What Does D&O Insurance Not Cover: square infographic showing creditor claims, bankruptcy trustee action, and limited Side A protection during corporate insolvency.

According to the Insurance Information Institute, D&O claims are increasingly arising from corporate insolvency scenarios, where directors face suits from creditors, employees, and shareholders simultaneously.

For any company with significant debt, private equity backing, or operating in a volatile sector, having adequate Side A limits and properly structured bankruptcy carve-backs is not optional. It is a baseline requirement that a specialized broker should be building into the program from the start, not something to address after a financial crisis begins.

How Do You Close the Gaps in Your D&O Coverage?

Knowing what does D&O insurance not cover is only useful if you take steps to close the gaps. Most of the exclusions described in this article can be narrowed through endorsements, carve-backs, or coordinated coverage with other policies in your program. But that negotiation has to happen before a claim, not after.

What 40+ years in commercial insurance has taught me is that the exclusions in a D&O policy are not fixed rules. They are starting points for negotiation. The question is whether your broker knows which ones to push on, which carriers will accept the modifications, and how to document the coverage intent so there is no ambiguity when a claim is filed.

Here is what every board and executive team should do:

  • Review the exact exclusion language with a specialist. Generic descriptions of D&O exclusions, including this article, are starting points. The specific wording in your policy is what determines actual coverage.
  • Coordinate D&O with EPLI, E&O, fiduciary, and cyber policies. The gaps that hurt most are the ones that fall between policies. Review all of them together with the same broker.
  • Confirm your retroactive date and prior acts coverage. If you have recently joined a board, acquired a company, or changed carriers, your prior acts exposure may not be covered by the new policy.
  • Ensure Side A limits are adequate for the individual risk. If the company faces insolvency, directors need enough Side A coverage to fund their defense and any personal exposure without relying on company indemnification.
  • Ask your broker specifically about carve-backs. Insured vs. insured carve-backs, bankruptcy trustee claims, and derivative suits should all be reviewed to confirm the language protects executives in the scenarios most likely to generate claims.

The IRMI’s D&O Liability Insurance resource notes that the difference between a well-structured and a poorly structured D&O program often comes down to endorsements and exclusion carve-backs that most buyers never ask for.

If you are not certain your current D&O program addresses these exclusions properly, the right move is to get it reviewed by a specialist. The cost of that review is small compared to the cost of discovering a gap after a claim is already filed against you personally.

D&O Exclusion

What It Excludes

Common Carve-Back

Fraud and criminal acts

Deliberate wrongdoing once adjudicated

Defense costs paid until final adjudication

Bodily injury / property damage

Physical harm claims

Governance claims tied to BI/PD allegations

Prior acts / pending litigation

Pre-retroactive date wrongful acts

Full prior acts coverage through endorsement

Professional services

E&O-type rendering of services

Governance oversight of professional decisions

Employment practices

EPL claims against the entity

Derivative suits mixing governance and HR

Pollution

Environmental damage and clean-up

Investor misrepresentation about environmental issues

Insured vs. insured

One insured suing another

Derivative suits, bankruptcy trustees, whistleblowers

Cyber events

Data breaches and network security failures

Board governance oversight of cyber risk management

Punitive damages / fines

Penalties uninsurable by law

Compensatory damages and defense costs remain covered

Nine exclusion categories. Nine ways a claim can be denied. Most D&O programs we review have at least one gap that the insured never knew existed.

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Questions About What D&O Insurance Does Not Cover?

D&O covers defense costs for fraud allegations throughout the investigation and litigation process. Coverage is excluded only after a final, non-appealable adjudication or written admission of guilt establishes that the fraud actually occurred. For allegations that settle, are dismissed, or result in civil findings without a criminal conviction, D&O often still responds. The exact adjudication language in the policy determines where the line falls.

When a standalone EPLI policy is in place, the D&O policy typically excludes employment practices claims to avoid overlap and push those claims into the EPLI policy. If no EPLI exists, basic D&O may provide limited employment practices coverage for claims against individual insured persons. Claims that mix governance issues with employment allegations, such as a derivative suit involving a discriminatory compensation structure, may receive partial D&O carve-backs.

Bodily injury sits under general liability and employers’ liability policies. D&O is a management liability product covering wrongful acts in an executive capacity, not physical harm to people or property. Some policies have carve-backs that restore D&O coverage where bodily injury is part of a securities or governance claim, but the underlying physical injury itself is excluded. The word used in the exclusion (“for” vs. “arising out of”) significantly affects how far the exclusion reaches.

No. D&O is a claims-made policy with prior and pending litigation exclusions. Claims that were in progress, or that arose from wrongful acts before the retroactive date, are not covered under a new policy. If you are acquiring a company or joining a new board, you need to confirm that prior acts coverage or tail coverage is in place for pre-close or pre-appointment exposures.

The cyber event itself is excluded from most D&O policies and belongs under a dedicated cyber policy. However, a separate claim that the board failed to exercise proper governance oversight of the company’s cyber risk program may still be covered under D&O. Companies with significant cyber exposure should maintain both a dedicated cyber policy and a D&O policy, and have a broker review the governance coverage language in both.

Bankruptcy creates some of the most complex D&O scenarios. Side A coverage, which pays directors and officers directly when the company cannot indemnify them, becomes critical in insolvency. Creditor exclusions, insured vs. insured carve-backs, and the adequacy of Side A limits all determine whether individual directors are actually protected. Companies facing financial distress should have their D&O program reviewed by a specialist before a crisis occurs, not during one.

Most D&O policies exclude civil fines, penalties, and punitive or exemplary damages to the extent they are uninsurable under applicable law. Regulatory fines, penalties imposed by government agencies, and punitive damages in certain jurisdictions are typically not covered. Compensatory damages and defense costs are generally covered. The insurability of fines varies by jurisdiction, and some specialized policy forms include limited coverage for certain regulatory penalties.

Get the Right Coverage for Your D&O Program

Gordon B. Coyle has over 40 years of experience helping business owners and executives navigate the complex world of commercial insurance. He has reviewed hundreds of D&O programs and consistently found gaps that most directors and officers never knew existed.

The Coyle Group builds management liability programs for private companies, nonprofits, and professional services organizations. We audit what you currently have, close the exclusion gaps we find, and coordinate your D&O with EPLI, E&O, fiduciary, and cyber policies so nothing falls through when a claim happens.

If you are not certain your current D&O program addresses these exclusions properly, the right move is to get it reviewed by a specialist. Reach out and we will show you exactly where your program is exposed before a claim forces the question.

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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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