What is Directors and Officers Insurance?
Directors and officers insurance protects company directors and senior managers from personal liability claims arising from decisions they make in their role. This guide explains how D&O cover works in the UK.
Directors and officers (D&O) insurance protects the personal assets of company directors and senior officers when they are sued or face regulatory action in connection with decisions made in their management capacity. Unlike other business insurance policies, D&O cover is designed to protect individuals, not the company itself.
Directors of UK private limited companies have a wide range of legal duties under the Companies Act 2006, and breaching these duties can result in personal liability — even though the company has limited liability for its debts.
Why Directors Need Personal Protection
Limited liability protects shareholders from company debts, but it does not shield directors from personal claims. Directors can be personally sued by:
- Shareholders — For breach of fiduciary duty or mismanagement
- Creditors — Particularly in insolvency situations (wrongful trading or fraudulent trading)
- Employees — For employment law breaches, discrimination, or unfair dismissal
- Regulators — HMRC, the FCA, HSE, ICO, and other bodies can bring actions against directors personally
- Customers and third parties — For negligent misstatement or breach of statutory duty
- The company itself — A company can sue its own directors for breach of duty
The legal costs of defending a claim alone can be substantial, even if the director is ultimately found not at fault.
What D&O Insurance Covers
D&O policies typically provide three types of cover, known as insuring clauses:
| Side | What It Covers |
|---|---|
| Side A | Personal liability of directors and officers when the company cannot or will not indemnify them (e.g. during insolvency) |
| Side B | Reimburses the company when it indemnifies a director for a covered claim |
| Side C | Covers the company itself for securities claims (more relevant to listed companies) |
For most UK private companies, Side A and Side B are the critical elements.
Specific Coverages
- Defence costs — Legal fees for defending civil, criminal, or regulatory proceedings
- Settlements and judgments — Compensation or damages awarded against the director
- Regulatory investigations — Costs of responding to investigations by HMRC, the FCA, HSE, or ICO
- Employment practices liability — Claims from employees (often included as an extension or separate section)
- Tax investigations — HMRC enquiries into the company’s tax affairs
- Extradition proceedings — Legal costs if a director faces extradition
- Crisis communication — PR costs to manage reputational damage following a claim
What D&O Insurance Does Not Cover
- Fraudulent, dishonest, or criminal acts — If the director is found to have acted dishonestly (though defence costs are usually covered until a finding is made)
- Bodily injury and property damage — Covered by public liability insurance and employers’ liability insurance
- Professional negligence — Covered by professional indemnity insurance
- Known claims — Claims or circumstances the director was aware of before the policy started
- Prior and pending litigation — Ongoing disputes at the time the policy incepts
Directors’ Duties Under the Companies Act 2006
D&O claims often arise from alleged breaches of the statutory duties set out in Sections 171 to 177 of the Companies Act 2006:
- Duty to act within powers (s.171)
- Duty to promote the success of the company (s.172)
- Duty to exercise independent judgment (s.173)
- Duty to exercise reasonable care, skill, and diligence (s.174)
- Duty to avoid conflicts of interest (s.175)
- Duty not to accept benefits from third parties (s.176)
- Duty to declare interest in proposed transactions (s.177)
Directors also face liability under the Insolvency Act 1986 for wrongful trading if they allow the company to continue trading when they knew (or should have known) there was no reasonable prospect of avoiding insolvency.
Who Should Have D&O Insurance?
D&O insurance is relevant for:
- All limited company directors — Even a single-director company can face claims
- Non-executive directors — They face the same duties and liabilities as executive directors
- Company secretaries — Often included in the definition of “officer”
- Shadow directors — Individuals who effectively direct the company without being formally appointed
- Charity trustees — Who face similar duties of care and fiduciary responsibility
D&O insurance is especially important for:
- Companies with external investors — Angel investors and venture capital firms often require D&O cover as a condition of investment
- Companies in regulated industries — Where the risk of regulatory action is higher
- Companies facing financial difficulty — When insolvency risk increases, so does the risk of director liability claims
Cost of D&O Insurance
D&O premiums vary significantly based on:
| Factor | Impact |
|---|---|
| Company size and turnover | Larger companies pay more |
| Industry | Financial services, construction, and technology attract higher premiums |
| Number of directors | More directors = higher risk exposure |
| Claims history | Prior claims or regulatory actions increase costs |
| Financial health | Companies in financial difficulty pay more |
| Cover limit | Higher limits cost more |
| Excess | Higher excess reduces premiums |
For a small UK private company, annual premiums typically range from £500 to £2,000. Companies with complex risk profiles, external investors, or regulatory exposure can pay significantly more.
D&O Insurance and Your Accounts
- Premiums paid by the company are an allowable business expense for Corporation Tax
- The premium is not treated as a benefit in kind for the directors (HMRC accepts this as a business cost, not personal remuneration)
- If a claim payout covers the company’s indemnification costs (Side B), it is typically treated as a recovery against the expense in the company’s accounts
- Keep accurate accounting records of premium payments and any claims
D&O Insurance vs Company Indemnity
Many companies provide directors with a qualifying third-party indemnity provision (QTIP) under the Companies Act 2006, which means the company agrees to reimburse directors for claims. However, a company indemnity has limitations:
- The company cannot indemnify a director against fines in criminal proceedings
- The company cannot indemnify a director against penalties imposed by regulatory bodies
- If the company becomes insolvent, it cannot honour the indemnity
D&O insurance provides protection in all three of these scenarios, which is why it is essential even when a company indemnity is in place.
Claims Examples
Common scenarios that trigger D&O claims for UK private companies:
- HMRC investigation into the company’s tax affairs, with allegations of director negligence in overseeing compliance
- Wrongful trading claim brought by a liquidator against directors who continued trading when the company was insolvent
- Employment tribunal claim for unfair dismissal or discrimination, naming a director personally
- Shareholder dispute where minority shareholders allege the directors breached their duties
- Regulatory investigation by the ICO following a data breach, with potential personal liability for directors who failed to ensure adequate data protection