Medical Practice BOP Insurance: Does It Cover Malpractice?

Empty exam room in a Texas medical practice illustrating BOP insurance coverage gaps
The BOP protects the building. What happens inside this room is a different policy entirely. Texas medical practices, 2026.

Published: · Approx. 9 minute read

Medical Practice Insurance · Texas

Medical Practice BOP Insurance: Does It Cover Malpractice? The 5 Gaps It Leaves (Texas, 2026)

A Business Owner’s Policy is the foundation under a Texas practice — not the roof, the walls, or the exam room.

TL;DR FOR BUSY PEOPLE

A Business Owner’s Policy bundles commercial property, general liability, and business income coverage into one contract, and it is the sensible first policy for most Texas medical practices. But a standard BOP does not cover medical malpractice, workers’ compensation, commercial auto, or health and disability coverage — and its response to a patient-data breach is limited at best. The gaps are not defects. They are the design. Knowing exactly where the form ends is what separates a practice that recovers from one that does not.

FAST ANSWER

  • No — a standard BOP does not cover medical malpractice. The Insurance Information Institute is direct about it: a businessowners policy does not cover professional liability, auto insurance, workers’ compensation, or health and disability insurance. A patient alleging a missed diagnosis is a professional liability claim, and it belongs on a separate policy.
  • The Texas nuance: Texas is the only state where most private employers may decline workers’ compensation. A BOP will not fill that hole — and under Texas Labor Code § 406.033, an employer that opts out forfeits the common-law defenses of contributory negligence, assumption of risk, and fellow-employee negligence when a staff member sues.
  • The financial impact: healthcare has been the costliest industry for data breaches for fourteen consecutive years, averaging $7.42 million per incident and 279 days to identify and contain, according to IBM’s 2025 Cost of a Data Breach Report. A BOP’s liability section was never built to absorb that.

The Sprinkler Head, the Ultrasound Cart, and the Second Envelope

It let go sometime Saturday night. By the time the office manager unlocked the suite on Monday morning, the ceiling tiles were on the floor, the carpet squelched under her shoes, and the portable ultrasound cart sat in two inches of standing water. The physician-owner was steady about it. She had a Business Owner’s Policy. She called her agent before she called anyone else, and the property claim moved the way property claims are supposed to move.

Three weeks later, the second envelope arrived. The medical assistant who had slipped on that wet vinyl while carrying boxes out of the flooded storage room had retained counsel. Same water. Same Saturday night. And a claim her BOP had never, at any point, agreed to pay. That distinction — one puddle, two entirely different legal worlds — is the whole subject of this article. It is a distinction that plays out in the practices lining Warren Parkway in Frisco, in the surgical suites off Legacy Drive in Plano, and in the family clinics strung along Highway 380 through McKinney and Little Elm.

Proverbs 27:12: “A prudent man foreseeth the evil, and hideth himself; but the simple pass on, and are punished.” The simple read the inclusions. The prudent read the exclusions. This is an exclusions article.

What a BOP Actually Is (and Who Qualifies)

A Business Owner’s Policy is a package contract that bundles commercial property coverage, general liability coverage, and business income coverage onto a single form — most commonly Insurance Services Office form BP 00 03. It is the gateway policy, the one most Texas medical practices buy first, and for good reason. If you want the mechanics of the package itself, we have covered them in depth in our Texas Business Owner’s Policy guide. This article is about what happens at the edge of that form.

Strip the product down to first principles and the BOP stops looking like generosity. A BOP is not a policy. It is a discount for being predictable. Carriers can bundle property and liability cheaply because they are pooling thousands of small, similar, boring risks — a dental suite, an accounting office, a boutique. The pricing works precisely because the businesses inside the pool look alike. The moment your operation stops being generic — the moment you touch a patient — you have stepped outside the thing the discount was built to cover.

That logic shows up in the eligibility rules. Under ISO’s businessowners program, most eligible risks are held to a 35,000 square foot total floor area and $6,000,000 in annual gross sales at each location, though individual carriers file their own guidelines and yours may differ. It shows up in the limit structure, too. The BOP’s liability section carries a single combined liability and medical expense limit rather than the separate limits a commercial general liability form provides, with aggregates set as a multiple of that limit. Cheaper, simpler, thinner. Whether your practice clears the underwriting bar at all is a question of BOP eligibility rules — and a specialty medical office BOP program is often the better landing spot than a Main Street form.

The BOP is the basement and the front door. It keeps the weather out and stops a stranger from walking in. It has nothing whatsoever to say about what happens in the exam room.

Diagram showing the three coverages inside a medical practice business owner's policy and five coverages excluded from it
A BOP bundles three coverages onto one form. Five more sit outside it — and a declarations page will not tell you that.

The Texas Reality: The Non-Subscriber Trap

Here is where the declarations page does its quiet damage. Scan a BOP’s liability section and you will find a line item labeled medical expenses. A practice owner reads that, reasonably concludes that injuries are handled, and moves on.

That coverage is for patients and visitors. It is not for staff. Bodily injury to an employee arising out of employment falls under the BOP’s employer’s liability exclusion — the coverage carve-out that exists specifically because the legislature expected workers’ compensation to sit in that seat.

Except in Texas, nothing forces you to fill it. Texas is the only state that allows private-sector employers the option of not purchasing workers’ compensation insurance, and the Texas Department of Insurance reports that in 2024, the share of employers that were non-subscribers stood at 24% — the lowest level since 2016, but still roughly one employer in four.

Opting out is not free. It is a trade, and the terms are set by statute. Under Texas Labor Code § 406.033(a), a non-subscribing employer sued by an injured employee cannot argue that the employee was contributorily negligent, that the employee assumed the risk, or that a fellow employee caused the injury. The exclusive-remedy protection that shields a subscribing employer under § 408.001(a) does not apply. Your medical assistant simply sues you, directly, in civil court — and three of the defenses an ordinary defendant would reach for have been taken off the table before the first filing.

A BOP does not respond to that claim. Nothing in the package does. Whether your practice should subscribe, buy an occupational injury plan, or structure something else entirely is a decision to make with your attorney and your agent together — our overview of workers’ comp for Texas small businesses is a starting point, not a substitute for that conversation.

The lease exhibit is the second Texas reality. Most North Texas medical office leases require an additional-insured endorsement in the landlord’s favor and a certificate of insurance evidencing coverages the BOP alone does not contain. We walk through those obligations line by line in what a Texas medical office lease actually requires.

Comparison of Texas workers compensation subscriber protections versus non-subscriber liability exposure for medical practices
Opting out of Texas workers’ compensation is a trade, and the terms are set by statute — not by your carrier.

The Five Gaps: Myths a Declarations Page Creates

  • Myth 1: “My BOP covers me if a patient sues.” Reality: it covers you if a patient trips. General liability responds to bodily injury and property damage arising from your premises and operations. A claim arising from clinical judgment — a missed diagnosis, a medication error, a treatment decision — is professional liability, and standard BOP forms exclude professional services. Where carriers spell the exclusion out, the language reaches medical, surgical, dental, X-ray and nursing services, treatment, advice, and instruction. The distinction is drawn cleanly in malpractice versus general liability for a Texas practice, and if your malpractice policy is written on a claims-made basis, you also owe yourself a hard look at tail coverage before you ever change carriers.
  • Myth 2: “Medical expenses on my BOP means my staff is covered.” Reality: it does not. See above. Employee bodily injury sits behind the employer’s liability exclusion, and in Texas the consequences of leaving that gap open are statutory, not theoretical.
  • Myth 3: “There’s a cyber endorsement on my BOP, so HIPAA is handled.” Reality: a BOP’s liability section was not designed for protected health information, and ISO offers carriers exclusionary endorsements that remove liability arising from access to or disclosure of confidential or personal information — and from violations of laws addressing data privacy — outright. Where a cyber endorsement is added back, it typically carries a sublimit that bears no relationship to the actual cost of a PHI breach. Read our treatment of cyber insurance for Texas medical and dental practices before you assume the endorsement is enough.
  • Myth 4: “The practice car is on the BOP.” Reality: it is not. Commercial auto is a separate policy, and a personal auto policy may not respond to a vehicle used in the business. The medical equipment breakdown exposure sits in the same category — the sudden mechanical or electrical failure of an autoclave, a laser, or an imaging unit is generally an equipment breakdown matter, not a property peril, and it is usually endorsed on rather than included.
  • Myth 5: “I lease my suite, so I don’t need much property coverage.” Reality: the built-out casework, the lead-lined walls, the plumbing you paid for — that is tenant improvements and betterments, it is frequently your insurable interest rather than the landlord’s, and it is routinely underscheduled. Alongside it, employment-related claims from your own staff fall to a separate line as well; see EPLI for Texas business owners. If you want the general liability floor explained on its own terms, start with what general liability actually covers in Texas.
Infographic listing the five coverage gaps in a Texas medical practice business owner's policy and the policy that responds to each
The five gaps, and what actually responds to each. Save this before your next renewal.

We break down one real coverage gap a week — the kind that only surfaces at claim time. If you run a practice in North Texas, follow The Agent’s Office® on Facebook. It is the fastest way to catch the exclusion before your renewal does.

Which Policy Actually Responds?

ScenarioOutcome
A patient trips on a floor mat in the waiting roomBOP — general liability section
A patient alleges a missed diagnosisNot the BOP. Medical professional liability (malpractice)
A pipe bursts and destroys exam room casework you paid to installBOP — property, if tenant improvements are properly scheduled
A medical assistant is injured lifting suppliesNot the BOP. Workers’ compensation, or a Texas non-subscriber claim
A phishing email exposes 4,000 patient recordsRarely the BOP. Cyber liability, subject to how the policy is endorsed
The autoclave fails and spoils a day of instrumentsGenerally not base property. Equipment breakdown coverage
A front-desk employee alleges wrongful terminationNot the BOP. Employment practices liability
Staff member rear-ends someone driving to the labNot the BOP. Commercial auto, or hired and non-owned auto
Decision flowchart showing whether a business owner's policy or a separate policy responds to common Texas medical practice claims
Blue means the BOP responds. Orange means it does not. Most practice owners have never seen the orange half.

Note what this table is not: a coverage determination. Whether any specific claim is paid depends on the policy form you actually hold, the endorsements attached to it, the facts of the loss, and your carrier’s adjudication. No article — including this one — can promise an outcome. What the table can do is show you the shape of the questions to bring to your next renewal.

Premiums follow the same logic. A medical BOP is rated on the things that make your practice unlike the pool: square footage, payroll, the scheduled value of your equipment, your limit selection, your loss history, and where the suite sits. We do not publish a single Texas medical BOP figure, because a two-provider family clinic in Little Elm and a dermatology practice with three lasers and a build-out are not the same risk, and a number that averages them serves nobody. The honest answer requires a quote.

Data card showing the average healthcare data breach cost of 7.42 million dollars and 279 days to contain, per IBM's 2025 report
Healthcare has been the costliest sector for data breaches for fourteen consecutive years. Source: IBM, Cost of a Data Breach Report 2025.

KEY FINDINGS (JULY 2026)

  1. Healthcare was the costliest industry for data breaches for the fourteenth consecutive year, averaging $7.42 million per incident and 279 days to identify and contain — roughly five weeks longer than the global average lifecycle (IBM, Cost of a Data Breach Report 2025).
  2. 772 healthcare data breaches affecting 500 or more individuals were reported for 2025 to the HHS Office for Civil Rights — a record annual total — involving the protected health information of more than 139 million individuals (HHS OCR breach portal, totals as listed in June 2026).
  3. OCR resolved 21 HIPAA cases with settlements or civil monetary penalties in 2025, collecting $8,330,066 (HHS Office for Civil Rights, 2025).
  4. 24% of Texas employers were workers’ compensation non-subscribers in 2024 — the lowest share since 2016 — and non-subscribers forfeit statutory liability protections and may be sued directly by injured employees (Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation, 2024 Biennial Report).

The Agent’s Office® Advantage

A captive agent sells you the BOP their carrier files. We are independent, which means we start somewhere else entirely: with the five gaps, and with whether the form on your desk is a Main Street businessowners policy that happens to have a medical class code stapled to it, or a purpose-built medical office program with malpractice, cyber, and equipment breakdown coordinated around it. Those are not the same product, and the difference does not show up in the premium. It shows up at claim time.

We compare across 75+ carriers, we read the exclusionary endorsements before we present the quote, and we tell you directly which lines your practice still has open. Service is by phone, text, and email — the agency is fully virtual, so a physician in Frisco and a practice administrator in Dallas get the same response time.

One necessary word about the limits of an article. Everything above is general educational information about how insurance forms are typically structured. It is not legal advice, medical advice, tax advice, or a coverage opinion, and it does not guarantee that any carrier will offer coverage, that any claim will be paid, or that your practice is in compliance with any statute or regulation. Policy language governs. Employment, HIPAA, and non-subscriber decisions carry legal consequences that belong in front of a licensed Texas attorney. Coverage questions belong in front of a licensed agent looking at your actual declarations page. We are happy to be the second half of that sentence.

Ready to see your real options?

Bring us your current declarations page. We will map it against the five gaps, show you exactly which ones are open, and quote the practice across our carrier panel — including the specialty medical programs a single-carrier agent cannot reach. And for the coverage gap of the week, like The Agent’s Office® on Facebook.

FAQs about this topic

Does a Business Owner’s Policy cover medical malpractice?

No. A standard Business Owner’s Policy does not cover professional liability, and medical malpractice is professional liability. The Insurance Information Institute states that businessowners policies do not cover professional liability, auto insurance, workers’ compensation, or health and disability insurance. A patient claim arising from clinical judgment — diagnosis, treatment, prescribing — requires a separate medical professional liability policy. Your specific policy language controls, so confirm the professional services exclusion with your agent.

If my BOP includes medical expenses coverage, are my employees covered when they get hurt?

Generally no. The medical expenses coverage in a BOP is intended for third parties such as patients and visitors. Bodily injury to an employee arising out of employment falls under the policy’s employer’s liability exclusion. That exposure is normally handled by workers’ compensation insurance, which a BOP does not include.

Is workers’ compensation required for a medical practice in Texas?

Texas is the only state that generally allows private employers to decline workers’ compensation coverage. Employers who decline are called non-subscribers, and the Texas Department of Insurance reported that 24% of Texas employers were non-subscribers in 2024. Non-subscribers must post and file required notices, lose exclusive-remedy protection, and under Texas Labor Code Section 406.033 cannot assert the defenses of contributory negligence, assumption of risk, or fellow-employee negligence when an injured employee sues. Whether to subscribe is a legal and financial decision that should be made with a licensed attorney.

Does a BOP cover a HIPAA data breach?

Rarely in any meaningful way. Standard businessowners liability coverage was not designed for protected health information, and carriers commonly attach endorsements excluding liability arising from access to or disclosure of confidential or personal information. Some BOPs offer a cyber endorsement with a sublimit. Given that IBM’s 2025 Cost of a Data Breach Report put the average healthcare breach at $7.42 million, most practices need a standalone cyber liability policy rather than an endorsement. Coverage depends entirely on the form and endorsements you hold.

Can any medical practice buy a BOP?

Not automatically. Businessowners programs apply eligibility limits. Under ISO’s businessowners program, most eligible risks are subject to a 35,000 square foot floor area limit and $6,000,000 in annual gross sales per location, and individual carriers file their own eligibility guidelines that may be narrower. Larger practices, ambulatory surgery centers, and imaging centers are frequently written on a commercial package policy instead. An independent agent can tell you which market fits before you apply.

What does a BOP cost for a Texas medical practice?

There is no reliable single figure, and any published average that blends a two-provider clinic with a multi-laser dermatology practice will mislead you. Premium is driven by square footage, payroll, scheduled equipment values, selected limits, loss history, construction, and location. The only accurate number is a quote written against your actual exposures.

Are my tenant improvements covered under my landlord’s policy?

Often not. Improvements and betterments you paid to install — casework, specialized plumbing, lead-lined walls, built-in cabinetry — are frequently your insurable interest rather than your landlord’s, and they are commonly underscheduled on the BOP property section. Review your lease and your declarations page together; the two documents must agree.

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George Azide

George Azide

Founder & Principal, The Agent’s Office® · Frisco, Texas

George is the Founder of The Agent’s Office® in Frisco, Texas. As an independent agent, he specializes in translating complex insurance terms into clear, honest strategies for families and business owners. George helps clients across North Texas protect their income and assets through customized insurance solutions.

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