- For any business handling data
- The fastest-growing commercial risk
Cyber Liability Insurance
The small business myth: "we're too small to be targeted." The data says the opposite.
Cyber liability insurance covers the costs you face when your business is breached, hit with ransomware, or has customer data exposed. It is now one of the most important coverages for Texas businesses of every size, especially because small businesses are targeted more often than large ones.
- Covers ransomware payments, recovery, and lost income
- Pays for breach notification, credit monitoring, and PR response
- Defends against lawsuits from customers whose data was exposed
- Required by many enterprise contracts and HIPAA-covered work
🔒 Request your free cyber review
Trusted by Texas businesses since 1983
Cyber placements at every size
Whichever fits your data exposure
Across hardened cyber markets
We help meet carrier security requirements
How cyber coverage actually works
Cyber policies cover two completely different categories of cost.
Most cyber policies split into first-party coverage (your own costs to deal with the incident) and third-party coverage (lawsuits and claims from people whose data you exposed). Both matter. Most uninsured businesses are surprised by both.
First-party: Your own costs
What you spend recovering from the incident.
- Forensic investigation to find out what happened
- Ransomware payments and negotiator fees (where legally permitted)
- Data recovery and system restoration
- Business interruption income loss while systems are down
- Customer breach notification costs (printing, mailing, call centers)
- Credit monitoring services offered to affected customers
- PR and crisis communications
Third-party: Claims by others
Legal claims by customers, partners, and regulators.
- Lawsuits by customers whose personal data was exposed
- Class actions from large breach events
- Regulatory fines and penalties (where insurable by law)
- PCI fines and assessments from card networks
- Claims by business partners whose data flowed through your systems
- Legal defense costs across all of the above
Texas notification law has hard deadlines.
Under the Texas Identity Theft Enforcement and Protection Act, businesses that experience a breach of sensitive personal information must notify affected Texans without unreasonable delay, and larger breaches require notification to the Texas Attorney General. The clock starts when the breach is discovered. A cyber policy is what funds the response.
Why cyber matters now
The reality most small businesses don't see coming.
Cyber attacks aren’t just a Fortune 500 problem. Small and mid-size businesses are targeted more often, take longer to recover, and rarely have the in-house resources to respond. Insurance is the practical answer for businesses without dedicated security teams.
Ransomware
Attackers encrypt your systems and demand payment. Recovery costs include the ransom (where paid), forensic work, downtime, and rebuilding affected systems.
Phishing & wire fraud
Attackers impersonate executives or vendors and trick employees into wiring funds or changing payment details. Often six-figure losses for small businesses.
Data breaches
Customer information, payment card data, employee records, or health information accessed by unauthorized parties. Triggers notification requirements.
Business interruption
Systems offline for days or weeks. Lost revenue, unmet contracts, and the cost of operating from manual workarounds.
Customer notification
Texas law and federal regulations require notification after certain types of breaches. The cost of notifying thousands of customers is real and quick.
Litigation & regulatory
Customers, business partners, and regulators may bring claims after a breach. Defense costs alone can exceed the original incident response.
What a cyber policy typically includes
The core protections, and what's changed in cyber underwriting.
Cyber insurance is one of the fastest-evolving products in commercial insurance. After several years of heavy losses, most carriers now require minimum security controls before they will quote: multi-factor authentication, regular backups, endpoint protection, and employee training. We help you understand what’s required and how to position your business for the best terms.
Coverage, sub-limits, and underwriting requirements vary significantly by carrier. Many policies now have separate ransomware sub-limits and waiting periods.
Forensics, legal counsel, and breach coaching to coordinate the response.
Payments, negotiation, and recovery costs, often subject to sub-limits.
Lost income while systems are unavailable due to a covered event.
Customer notification and credit monitoring after a breach.
Lawsuits by affected customers, partners, and regulators.
Wire fraud and similar losses from manipulation, often a sub-limit.
Who needs cyber coverage
Almost every Texas business with a computer.
If your business uses email, accepts payments, stores customer information, or runs on connected systems, you have cyber exposure. Some industries face elevated risk and regulatory requirements that make coverage essentially mandatory.
Healthcare & medical
HIPAA exposure makes cyber liability close to mandatory for medical practices.
Professional services
CPAs, attorneys, advisors, consultants. Your clients trust you with sensitive data.
Retail & e-commerce
Payment card data, customer accounts, and online operations all create exposure.
Manufacturing & ops
Ransomware shutting down operational systems is a leading mid-market loss.
Why work with Aimbest
Cyber underwriting changed. We changed with it.
The cyber market hardened significantly over the last several years. Carriers now require security controls before they will quote, sub-limits matter more than ever, and policy wording varies dramatically between markets. After more than four decades, we know how to position a business for terms that actually work in a claim.
Cyber policies are not commodities. We compare scope, sub-limits, and panel vendors.
We help you complete cyber applications cleanly so quotes come back competitive.
Most cyber policies require using the carrier’s panel vendors. We explain who’s on it.
"After our first close call with a phishing attempt, Aimbest reviewed our cyber policy and immediately spotted a wire fraud sub-limit that was way too low. They rewrote it across the right carriers."
How it works
From first call to covered business, four steps.
Share your business and any current coverage. A licensed advisor follows up.
We review your data, systems, and current controls, then prepare the application.
Coverage, sub-limits, and pricing in plain language. We explain the trade-offs.
Bind the policy and keep a Texas advisor for renewals, claims, and security questions.
Common questions
Cyber liability, answered.
Don't my other policies cover cyber claims?
No. General liability, commercial property, and most other commercial policies specifically exclude cyber events and electronic data losses. Some BOPs offer a small cyber endorsement, which can be a reasonable starting point for very small businesses, but the limits are typically too low to handle even a moderate breach. Standalone cyber liability is the policy actually built for these losses.
Aren't small businesses too small to be targeted?
Unfortunately, the opposite is closer to the truth. Small businesses are frequently targeted precisely because they have weaker security than large enterprises. Attackers automate their attacks at scale, hitting thousands of small businesses looking for the easiest paths in. Recovery is often harder for small businesses because they lack dedicated IT security staff. The financial impact is also proportionally greater.
What does Texas law require after a data breach?
The Texas Identity Theft Enforcement and Protection Act requires businesses to notify affected Texans without unreasonable delay following a breach of sensitive personal information, and breaches affecting 250 or more Texans must also be reported to the Texas Attorney General. Federal laws like HIPAA and state breach notification statutes in other states may apply on top of that if your business operates across state lines or in regulated industries. A cyber policy typically funds and coordinates this entire response. Specifics of compliance should be confirmed with a Texas attorney for your situation.
What are carriers requiring before they will quote cyber?
Most carriers now require minimum security controls before they will offer terms. Common requirements include multi-factor authentication on email and remote access, regular tested backups, endpoint detection and response (EDR), employee security awareness training, and an incident response plan. Some carriers require additional controls for higher-revenue businesses or those handling sensitive data. We help you complete cyber applications cleanly and identify gaps before underwriters see them.
What's a ransomware sub-limit and why does it matter?
Most cyber policies now have a sub-limit specifically for ransomware, which is a maximum payout for ransomware-related losses (often lower than the overall policy limit). This applies to ransom payments, negotiation, recovery, and sometimes related business interruption. If your policy has a $1M limit but a $250K ransomware sub-limit, the most you can recover from a ransomware event is $250K. We compare sub-limits carefully because they vary significantly between carriers.
Can you help if my cyber policy is being non-renewed?
Often, yes. Cyber non-renewals usually follow a claim, a tightening of carrier appetite, or an underwriting concern about your security controls. We work across multiple cyber markets, including those that specialize in higher-risk and post-claim placements. Bring us your details, including the carrier’s reasons if you have them, and we’ll show you what’s available.
Related coverage
What pairs with cyber liability.
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Let's close the cyber gap before it's a claim.
Request a free, no-obligation cyber review. We’ll explain first-party vs. third-party, sub-limits, and what your current policies actually cover.