As cannabis operations scale, sticking with last year’s business income limits is a costly mistake.
In the cannabis industry, growth is the norm. Cultivators expand into new facilities, retailers open more storefronts, and manufacturers add new product lines. And revenue? It climbs right alongside them. Yet many cannabis businesses (and their agents) make a critical misstep: renewing business income insurance “as expiring,” without adjusting limits to reflect that growth.
What seems like a shortcut at renewal can quickly turn into a multimillion-dollar problem after a loss. Because as revenue rises, so do fixed expenses like payroll, rent, utilities, and the potential business income loss if operations are disrupted. A policy that once looked adequate on paper can leave a significant gap when a claim hits.
How Underinsurance Happens — and What It Costs
Here’s the reality. Cannabis sales almost always increase year over year. When policies don’t evolve with that growth, they fail to keep pace with today’s exposure. That’s especially true if the policy includes monthly limitation endorsements, which cap payouts per month regardless of actual losses.
Below are four real-world examples of what that gap can look like:
Cultivation Facility: Electrical Fire in Grow Room
- Prior Limit: $2M business income limit, 1/6 monthly limitation ($333K/month)
- Current Exposure: $750K/month after 50% sales growth
- Loss: Facility shut down for 7 months during rebuild and crop regrowth
- Coverage Gap: $417K uncovered monthly × 7 months = $2.9M uninsured
Extraction Lab: Explosion of Extraction Vessel
- Prior Limit: $3M business income limit, 1/3 monthly limitation ($1M/month)
- Current Exposure: $1.4M/month after revenue increased from $12M to $18M
- Loss: 8-month downtime due to explosion and equipment delays
- Coverage Gap: $400K uncovered monthly × 8 months = $3.2M uninsured
Retail Dispensary: Kitchen Fire During Peak Season
- Prior Limit: $1.5M business income limit, 1/4 monthly limitation ($375K/month)
- Current Exposure: $600K/month after revenue grew from $10M to $16M
- Loss: Fire halts operations for 5 months
- Coverage Gap: $225K uncovered monthly × 5 months = $1.1M uninsured
Distributor/Transport: Warehouse Fire
- Prior Limit: $2.5M business income limit, 1/6 monthly limitation ($417K/month)
- Current Exposure: $700K/month after expansion
- Loss: Distribution halted for 4 months
- Coverage Gap: $283K uncovered monthly × 4 months = $1.13M uninsured
The takeaway? A stagnant policy in a rapidly growing industry almost guarantees a shortfall. And when that shortfall reaches into the millions, it can cripple even the most successful operation.
3 Key Lessons for Agents and Operators
As these examples show, business income insurance isn’t a “set it and forget it” type of coverage, especially in a market that moves as quickly as cannabis. Agents play a critical role in making sure policies evolve alongside their clients’ operations. Here are three important takeaways to guide those renewal conversations:
1. Annual Growth = Higher BI Needs
Rapid expansion is a hallmark of the cannabis industry, and last year’s coverage rarely matches this year’s reality.
2. Monthly Limitations Can Strangle Recovery
Even if the total business income insurance limit looks sufficient, a monthly cap can leave significant portions of a claim unpaid.
3. Review Coverage Every Renewal
Business income loss exposure should be recalculated annually, especially in growth industries like cannabis.
Agent Checklist: Questions to Guide the Conversation
Use this checklist as a starting point to identify whether your cannabis clients may be underinsured and where to dig deeper during renewal discussions:
- Have your client’s annual revenues increased since the last policy term? By how much?
- Has the business expanded operations, opened new locations, added product lines, or scaled production?
- Have fixed costs like payroll, rent, or utilities increased with that growth?
- Does the current policy include a monthly limitation endorsement, and does that limit reflect today’s exposure?
- Has the client conducted a recent business income valuation to accurately estimate potential losses?
- Are financial records current and detailed enough to support a switch to coinsurance or higher BI limits?
- If ALS coverage isn’t available, have you discussed how coinsurance or adjusted monthly limits could improve protection?
Coverage Structures: What to Know
Not all business income insurance is structured the same. Each option has trade-offs agents and insureds must understand:
Actual Loss Sustained (ALS)
- What It Is: Pays the insured’s actual business income loss, with no pre-set dollar limit, subject to the period of restoration.
- Pros: Most flexible and responsive to revenue growth. Coverage scales automatically.
- Cons: Rarely offered in cannabis due to revenue volatility and difficulty verifying financials.
Monthly Limitation (e.g., 1/3, 1/4, 1/6)
- What It Is: Splits the BI limit into fractions, capping payouts per month. A $1.2M limit with 1/4 monthly pays a max of $300K/month.
- Pros: Easier underwriting and predictable exposure for carriers.
- Cons: Restrictive — if actual losses exceed the monthly cap, the insured absorbs the difference, even if unused coverage remains.
Coinsurance (Typically 50%–125%)
- What It Is: Ties the BI limit to a percentage of annual business income. Underreporting triggers penalties at claim time.
- Pros: More accurately reflects revenue and can eliminate monthly caps.
- Cons: Requires detailed financial data. Underestimating income can mean steep penalties and underpayment.
FAQs About Business Income Insurance in Cannabis
Why is business income insurance so important for cannabis businesses?
Because cannabis companies often grow quickly, their revenue and exposure increases every year. Business income insurance helps replace lost income if operations are interrupted by a covered event, ensuring the business can pay expenses and recover without financial ruin.
How often should BI coverage be reviewed?
At minimum, once per year at renewal. However, if your client experiences rapid growth, adds new locations, or expands production mid-term, a mid-year review is a smart move.
What if ALS coverage isn’t available for my cannabis client?
While ALS is ideal, many carriers won’t offer it due to the volatility of cannabis sales. In those cases, carefully structured monthly limitation or coinsurance provisions paired with updated revenue data can still offer robust protection.
How can agents help clients avoid underinsurance?
By proactively reassessing income exposure every year, understanding how monthly limitations work, and explaining how revenue growth impacts potential losses. Asking detailed financial and operational questions during renewal is key.
The Bottom Line: In Cannabis, Yesterday’s Policy Won’t Cover Today’s Risk
Actual Loss Sustained coverage may be rare in the cannabis insurance market, but that doesn’t mean businesses are powerless. With most policies structured around monthly limitations or coinsurance, the key is proactive, annual review. That’s where Jencap comes in. Our cannabis specialists understand the unique operational realities and regulatory hurdles this industry faces. Connect with us today to review your accounts, identify coverage gaps, and build tailored solutions that protect against business income loss — no matter how fast your clients scale.