Insurance Topic
Retroactive Date
Retroactive date is the specified date in a claims-made insurance policy that establishes the earliest point in time for covered wrongful acts, errors, or omissions.
Definition
Retroactive date is the policy date that limits coverage in a claims-made insurance form to acts, errors, omissions, or events that occur on or after the designated date, regardless of when the claim is reported within the policy period.
Structural Characteristics
- Applies exclusively within claims-made policy forms
- Functions as a temporal boundary for covered conduct
- Operates independently from the policy’s effective date
- May be preserved through continuous policy renewal
- Interacts with extended reporting provisions
Parameters & Conditions
- The wrongful act must occur on or after the retroactive date
- The claim must be reported during the active policy period or applicable reporting extension
- Coverage continuity depends on maintaining uninterrupted claims-made coverage
- Changing insurers may alter or reset the retroactive date
Topic Relationships
Exceptions, Limitations & Boundaries
Retroactive date does not apply to occurrence-based policies and does not override exclusions or other policy conditions. Acts occurring before the retroactive date are excluded, even if the claim is reported during the policy period.
Retroactive Date: Definitional FAQ
Is retroactive date the same as the effective date?
No. The retroactive date establishes the earliest covered act, while the effective date marks the start of the policy period.
Does retroactive date apply to occurrence policies?
No. Occurrence policies are triggered by when the event happens, not by a retroactive date structure.
What happens if coverage lapses?
A lapse in claims-made coverage may result in loss of continuity, potentially affecting the preservation of the original retroactive date.