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Unique Liability Exposures of the Affluent
Erin (Aryn) Johnson (Marsh Private Client Risk Advisory) explained why personal liability risk is often the most consequential “silent” exposure for high-net-worth families, because lawsuits can be filed even when the insured is not clearly at fault, and the cost to defend a claim can be significant. She emphasized that affluent households should view liability protection as a cornerstone of risk management—not an afterthought—and that umbrella coverage is often the most cost-effective place to add meaningful protection.
1) Why Affluent Families Face Elevated Liability Risk
Johnson’s core point: higher net worth, visibility, and lifestyle complexity increase both (a) the number of ways a claim can arise and (b) the potential size of claims.
She referenced trends commonly described as “social inflation”—a litigation environment in which claim severity rises faster than general economic inflation due to:
- Broader theories of liability
- Higher plaintiff verdicts
- Expanding definitions of negligence
- Rising defense and litigation costs
Supporting resource:
NAIC – Social Inflation Overview
https://content.naic.org/insurance-topics/social-inflation
Common Exposure Drivers Highlighted
- Teenage / youthful drivers
- Domestic employees (nannies, housekeepers, estate staff)
- Entertaining at home
- Dogs and animal liability
- Swimming pools and attractive nuisances
- Nonprofit board memberships
- Social media activity and reputational injury
- Frequent international travel
Affluence increases visibility, and larger asset bases can make individuals more attractive litigation targets.
2) Primary vs. Excess vs. Umbrella Liability
Johnson distinguished clearly between three types of coverage:
Primary Liability
Found in homeowners, auto, renters, and watercraft policies.
Excess Liability
Adds additional limits over underlying policies but typically does not broaden coverage definitions.
Umbrella Liability
Provides:
- Higher limits
- Potentially broader coverage
- Defense costs (depending on form)
- Sometimes “drop down” protection in limited situations
She emphasized that not all policies marketed as “umbrella” provide identical coverage, and advisors should review policy language carefully.
Consumer guidance:
NAIC – What’s an Umbrella Policy?
https://content.naic.org/article/whats-umbrella-policy
3) Worldwide Coverage Is Not Universal
Affluent clients often assume liability coverage follows them globally. Johnson cautioned that:
- Some policies restrict geographic coverage.
- High-net-worth carriers often provide worldwide coverage.
- Advisors should verify policy territory language explicitly.
This is particularly relevant for international travel, foreign property ownership, and destination events.
4) Trusts and LLCs Must Be Properly Scheduled
One of the most practical warnings in the session:
If a trust or LLC owns property, it must be properly listed on the insurance policy.
Failure to align legal ownership and named insureds can result in:
- Coverage disputes
- Claim denials
- Gaps in defense protection
Johnson also discussed generational living arrangements. If:
- A home is owned by a trust,
- Parents move out,
- Children reside in the property,
The appropriate structure may shift (e.g., landlord policy + renters coverage instead of a standard homeowners policy).
This is especially relevant in sophisticated estate plans.
5) Uninsured / Underinsured Motorist Exposure
Johnson recommended reviewing:
- UM/UIM limits
- Availability of excess UM/UIM under umbrella policies
Industry data shows uninsured motorist rates remain significant.
Insurance Information Institute statistics:
https://www.iii.org/fact-statistic/facts-statistics-uninsured-motorists
(III cites Insurance Research Council findings indicating meaningful uninsured driver prevalence nationwide.)
For affluent families with significant assets, failing to carry high UM/UIM limits can expose them to uncompensated catastrophic injury losses.
6) Domestic Employees & Employment Practices Exposure
Affluent households employing domestic staff may face:
- Wrongful termination claims
- Discrimination allegations
- Wage and hour disputes
- Harassment claims
Johnson recommended evaluating Employment Practices Liability (EPL) coverage for households with staff.
This is often available via endorsement or specialty markets.
7) Nonprofit Board Service & D&O Coverage
Affluent individuals frequently serve on nonprofit boards.
Risks include:
- Fiduciary breach allegations
- Governance disputes
- Mismanagement claims
Johnson advised:
- Confirming that the nonprofit carries adequate Directors & Officers insurance
- Evaluating limit adequacy
- Understanding indemnification provisions
8) Youthful Drivers & Auto Liability Strategy
Teen drivers represent one of the largest household liability exposures.
Recommendations included:
- Defensive driving education
- Good student discounts
- Monitoring technology
- Reviewing liability limits carefully
She also discussed separating auto policies for adult children living independently to help protect parental assets and clarify insurable interests.
9) Entertaining & Social Host Liability Considerations
Hosting events introduces:
- Slip-and-fall risks
- Alcohol-related incidents
- Third-party injury claims
Mitigation may include:
- Professional bartenders with their own insurance
- Event policies for large gatherings
- Adequate umbrella limits
10) Determining Appropriate Liability Limits
Johnson stressed that umbrella limits should not be selected solely based on:
- Current net worth
Advisors should consider:
- Total asset base
- Lifestyle exposures
- Board participation
- Staff employment
- Future income
- Inheritance expectations
- Risk tolerance
She demonstrated a personal liability estimator tool designed to help calculate recommended coverage levels based on assets and risk profile.
11) Risk Mitigation Beyond Insurance
Insurance is one layer of defense. Johnson emphasized:
- Proper property maintenance (e.g., pools, hobby farms)
- Safety planning
- Legal structure alignment (trusts/LLCs properly insured)
- Reviewing policy forms annually
- Avoiding assumption-based coverage decisions
Key Takeaways for Advisors
- Umbrella liability is often underutilized relative to the scale of affluent exposure.
- Trust and LLC titling errors create preventable claim-denial scenarios.
- Youthful drivers and domestic staff are recurring high-severity exposure sources.
- Nonprofit board service requires separate D&O diligence.
- UM/UIM coverage is frequently overlooked but critically important.
- Policy language—not marketing labels—determines protection.
External Reference Sources
NAIC – Social Inflation Overview
https://content.naic.org/insurance-topics/social-inflation
NAIC – What’s an Umbrella Policy?
https://content.naic.org/article/whats-umbrella-policy
Insurance Information Institute – Uninsured Motorist Statistics
https://www.iii.org/fact-statistic/facts-statistics-uninsured-motorists
