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Commercial property insurance helps prepare your business for the worst.

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Protect your property from damage, loss, and theft with commercial property insurance.

Is your business prepared for the worst?

Fire, flooding, theft, or accidental damage are unfortunate incidents that could not only damage or destroy your property but could also devastate your business. Whether it’s your office building, commercial vehicles, or equipment, losing these assets would be a potentially critical setback for your business.

Replaces lost or damaged property.

A commercial property insurance policy may help protect against the cost of replacing lost or damaged property. Additionally, insurance may cover any associated losses—such as lost income—that are caused because part or all of your business is temporarily unable to operate.

  What is covered under a commercial property insurance policy?

While coverage may vary from policy to policy, things like the building structure, equipment, fixtures, building contents, and the property of others are typically included in this type of coverage.

  How much does commercial property insurance cost?

The cost of coverage may vary depending on a number of factors, including the type of building, the location it’s in, the type of business you operate, and whether you have fire alarms and security systems.

Policies may cover additional unexpected costs.

It’s worth exploring the options available to you with a business property insurance policy, as they may cover risks you hadn’t thought of. For example, some policies may protect against the additional costs you face if rebuilding a damaged business facility means no longer being exempt from local building codes. Other points to check include whether a policy covers the cost of removing debris before reconstruction begins, as well as whether the business property is covered against weather event damage while being rebuilt.

Commercial property insurance may help safeguard your business and assets, as well as your income. Contact us to learn more about your coverage options and business needs.

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY INSURANCE IN FLORIDA
What does commercial property insurance cover in Florida?

Commercial property insurance covers a business’s physical assets — the building (if owned), business personal property, inventory, equipment, and fixtures — against covered perils including fire, windstorm, lightning, theft, and vandalism.

⚠️ Florida commercial property policies do not cover flood damage (separate commercial flood policy required) and carry a hurricane deductible expressed as a percentage of the insured building value. For a $2 million building at 2%, that’s a $40,000 deductible before insurance responds.

What is the difference between a BOP and a commercial property policy?

A Business Owner’s Policy (BOP) bundles commercial property and general liability into a single, simplified policy for small to mid-size businesses. A standalone commercial property policy provides property coverage alone, with more flexibility in limits, perils, and endorsements.

BOP advantages: Simpler packaging, typically lower cost for qualifying businesses.

BOP limitations: Eligibility restrictions, lower built-in limits, less flexibility. Many Florida commercial risks — coastal properties, larger buildings, older construction — are better served by standalone policies placed through the E&S market.

What is business interruption insurance in Florida?

Business interruption insurance (also called business income coverage) pays for lost revenue and ongoing fixed expenses — rent, payroll, loan payments, utilities — when a covered physical loss forces your business to shut down or reduce operations.

For Florida businesses, this coverage is critical. A hurricane, fire, or flooding event can shut a business for weeks or months. Extended period of indemnity coverage can extend payments beyond the physical restoration period to allow time to rebuild the customer base.

 🐴 Ocala / Marion County

Equine businesses and agricultural operations have unique business interruption considerations — seasonal timing matters greatly, and a barn fire during breeding or foaling season can cause losses extending well beyond the physical repair period. 

🌊 Naples / Collier County

Post-Ian, many Collier County businesses were closed for extended periods — not just from direct damage but from employee displacement, supply chain disruption, and loss of customer base. Business interruption coverage was the difference between survival and closure for many businesses.

Does commercial property insurance cover hurricane damage in Florida?

Yes — Florida commercial property policies cover windstorm damage from hurricanes, but subject to a hurricane deductible expressed as a percentage of the insured building value. 

⚠️ Storm surge flooding from a hurricane is NOT covered under a commercial property policy — a separate commercial flood policy is required. Hurricane Ian’s devastating impacts were primarily from storm surge flooding, not wind, along coastal Southwest Florida. Both coverages are necessary in Florida’s coastal markets.

What is ordinance or law coverage and do Florida businesses need it?

Ordinance or law coverage pays for the additional cost of rebuilding a structure to current building codes after a covered loss — which standard property policies do not cover. In Florida, where building codes were significantly upgraded after Hurricane Andrew (1992) and again after Hurricane Charley (2004), this coverage is essential for any older commercial building.

If a 1980s commercial building suffers 50% or more damage from a hurricane, Florida law may require the entire building to be brought up to current code. The difference can be hundreds of thousands of dollars. Ordinance or law coverage includes: coverage for the undamaged portion that must be demolished, demolition cost, and increased cost of construction to meet current codes.

What is the difference between admitted and surplus lines commercial property insurance in Florida?

Admitted carriers: Licensed by the Florida OIR, follow state-regulated rates and forms, and are backed by FIGA if insolvent.

Surplus lines carriers: Not licensed in Florida but legally authorized to cover risks admitted carriers decline — and are not FIGA-backed.

For Florida commercial property, surplus lines placement is extremely common — coastal properties, older buildings, properties with prior losses, or specialty commercial uses often cannot find coverage in the admitted market. Surplus lines carriers like Lloyd’s of London syndicates and Markel provide coverage that keeps Florida businesses insured when admitted options are unavailable.

Find Your Coverage

We’re here to help you explore your coverage options.

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Contact Bird Insurance Services

Our Ocala, FL Office

516 SE 17th Street
Ocala, FL 34471

 
Email Us

Our Naples, FL Office

800 Harbour Drive Suite 210
Naples, FL 34103

 
Email Us

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  2. Step 2Review your options with us.
  3. Step 3Get the coverage you need.

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