Estimate business interruption coverage needs based on annual revenue, fixed expenses, extra expense projections, and restoration period.
Business interruption (BI) insurance replaces lost income and covers continuing expenses when your business is forced to close due to a covered peril such as fire, storm, or equipment breakdown. Without it, even a well-insured business can fail if it can't pay rent, payroll, and loan payments while rebuilding.
This calculator helps you determine how much business interruption coverage you need by analyzing your annual revenue, gross profit margin, fixed expenses, potential extra expenses, and estimated restoration period. The goal is to maintain your financial obligations until operations resume.
This is an educational estimate only. Actual BI coverage needs depend on your specific business, lease obligations, and recovery timeline. Work with a commercial insurance agent to structure the right BI policy for your operation. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation. By automating the calculation, you save time and reduce the risk of costly errors in your planning and decision-making process.
Business interruption claims are among the largest commercial insurance payouts. A fire that takes 6-12 months to rebuild can cost more in lost income than the property damage itself. This calculator ensures you have enough coverage to survive being closed, paying ongoing bills while generating no revenue. Having a precise figure at your fingertips empowers better planning and more confident decisions.
Monthly Gross Profit = (Annual Revenue × Gross Margin%) / 12 BI Coverage Need = (Monthly Gross Profit × Restoration Months) + Extra Expenses Estimated Annual Premium = BI Coverage × Premium Rate (approx. 0.5-1.5% of coverage)
Result: $255,000 coverage needed
Monthly gross profit: ($1,200,000 × 40%) / 12 = $40,000. Over 6 months: $240,000. Plus $15,000 extra expenses = $255,000 total BI coverage needed. Premium at 1% rate: ~$2,550/year.
Property insurance replaces your building and equipment, but it doesn't replace lost revenues or cover ongoing expenses while you're closed. Studies show that 40% of businesses that suffer a major disaster never reopen, largely because they can't sustain months of expenses without income.
Start with your gross profit (revenue minus variable costs like materials and direct labor). Fixed costs continue regardless of revenue: rent, utilities, insurance premiums, loan payments, and essential payroll. Multiply your monthly need by a realistic restoration period, then add extra expenses.
The most common mistake is underestimating the restoration period. Businesses assume 3-4 months, but full rebuilds often take 8-12+ months including permitting, construction, and equipment installation. ALWAYS err on the side of a longer restoration period — excess coverage costs very little compared to being underinsured.
BI insurance replaces lost net income and covers continuing fixed expenses (rent, utilities, payroll, loan payments) while your business is closed due to a covered peril. It also may cover extra expenses incurred to minimize the income loss.
BI coverage pays until you're back to normal operations or until the restoration period expires, whichever comes first. Standard restoration periods range from 12-18 months, but you can extend this. Extended BI coverage bridges the gap after reopening.
Extra expense coverage pays for costs above your normal operating expenses to keep the business running or minimize the shutdown period. Examples include renting temporary space, expediting equipment delivery, and setting up at a new location.
Most standard BI policies require physical damage to trigger coverage, so government-ordered closures without physical damage (like pandemics) typically aren't covered. Some specialty policies offer communicable disease coverage, but it's limited.
Consider the time to find and hire contractors, obtain permits, rebuild or repair, replace equipment, restock inventory, and retrain staff. Construction alone can take 6-12+ months. Add time for regulatory approvals and supply chain delays.
Contingent BI covers your income loss when a key supplier or customer suffers a covered loss. If your main supplier's factory burns down and you can't get materials, contingent BI covers your resulting lost income.