Corporate Event Insurance Guide 2026: Cancellation, Liability, Coverage
Event insurance was optional pre-2020. Post-pandemic, it's effectively required for any event over 30k EUR. This guide explains the main covers, typical premiums, and how to avoid gaps.
Six main event insurance covers
1. Event cancellation
Reimburses unrecoverable expenses if event is cancelled, postponed, or abandoned due to covered cause.
Covered causes typically include:
- Weather (specific named perils)
- Venue unavailability
- Natural disasters
- Terrorism at destination
- Key speaker non-appearance
- Communicable disease (depends on policy; check)
NOT covered:
- Poor ticket sales
- Business-decision cancellation
- Known-risk events
- Pandemic (unless specific rider, more expensive)
Typical premium: 0.6-1.4 percent of insured sum (total budget).
2. Public liability
Covers injury or property damage to third parties at your event.
Covers: slip-and-fall, food poisoning, equipment accidents, attendee injuries.
Minimum coverage: 5M EUR (many venues require). 10M EUR standard for larger events.
Typical premium: 300-1,500 EUR per event, scales with attendance.
3. Employer's liability (if staff onsite)
Covers injury to your own employees working at event. Usually part of corporate policy.
Required minimum (UK): 10M GBP. Varies by country.
4. Weather insurance
Covers losses from specific weather conditions (rain on outdoor event, extreme heat on outdoor gala).
Specific to outdoor or weather-sensitive events.
Premium: 1-3 percent of insured sum, very case-specific.
5. Cyber insurance
Covers data breach, streaming platform failure, registration system downtime, ransomware.
Increasingly important for hybrid / virtual events with attendee data.
Premium: 500-3,000 EUR per event (often already in corporate cyber master policy).
6. Speaker non-appearance
Reimburses event costs if contracted key speaker fails to appear.
Covers: illness, injury, travel disruption, scheduling conflict.
Premium: 1-3 percent of speaker fee, scales with speaker prominence.
Who needs event insurance
- Any event over 30k EUR: event cancellation recommended
- Any event with attendees (not purely internal): public liability minimum 5M
- Outdoor events: weather insurance
- Hybrid / virtual events: cyber insurance
- Events with named speakers costing >15k: speaker non-appearance
- Events in countries with higher risk: enhanced terrorism cover
Check corporate master policy first
Before buying event-specific insurance, check:
- Does corporate general liability extend to events? (Often yes, up to certain thresholds)
- Does corporate cyber policy cover registration platforms?
- Does travel insurance cover attendees' travel?
- Does D&O cover related event disputes?
Avoid double-insuring. Also confirm master policy's gaps so event-specific fills them.
European event insurance providers
Specialist
- Hiscox: strong event cancellation, UK-origin
- Allianz Event: Pan-European, strong on large conferences
- HDI: German-origin, big-event specialist
- AIG: US origin with European operations
- Munich Re: reinsurance giant, also direct events
Broker-led
For complex events, use broker (Marsh, Aon, Gallagher, Lockton). They shop multiple insurers. Typical broker fee: 10-15 percent of premium.
Pandemic / communicable disease cover
Post-2020, most policies exclude pandemic unless specific rider. If pandemic cover is critical:
- Add specific communicable disease rider (premium +40-100 percent)
- Must be purchased before outbreak declared
- Often capped at specific percentage of total cover
- Exclusions for "known circumstances"
Alternatively, negotiate strong force majeure in hotel contract (see related article) instead of buying pandemic insurance.
What to include when buying
- Total event budget (insured sum)
- Number of attendees
- Venue and dates
- Cancellation policy with hotel (drives cancellation cover scope)
- Named speakers (for non-appearance cover)
- Outdoor element yes/no
- Hybrid / virtual components
- International attendees (drives liability scope)
- Any known risks (concurrent events, political sensitivity)
Common exclusions to check
- War or terrorism in named "high-risk" countries
- Nuclear incidents
- Known risks at time of policy (e.g., ongoing strike)
- Cyber attacks if no MFA / security practices in place
- Speaker no-show due to "personal circumstances" (too vague)
- Weather events in "peak risk season"
Claims process
Timeline
- Incident occurs
- Notify insurer within 48-72 hours (check policy)
- File written claim within 14-30 days
- Provide documentation (contracts, invoices, incident report)
- Insurer investigates (30-90 days)
- Settlement or denial
Documentation you'll need
- Hotel contract
- Vendor contracts
- Paid invoices and deposits
- Email / written cancellation or incident records
- Force majeure declaration (if applicable)
- Government announcements (for travel restriction claims)
Cost-benefit calculation
Event budget 150k EUR. Cancellation insurance premium 1 percent = 1,500 EUR. For 1,500 EUR you protect 150k EUR in unrecoverable costs. For any event over 50k EUR, this math is obvious.
If event budget is under 30k EUR, insurance may not be needed (most costs are recoverable via deposits or small claim amounts not worth the admin).
Easy RFP hotel contracts include modern force majeure.
Reduces insurance premium requirements. Free plan available — no credit card.
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