Your online store faces real financial risk every single day and most sellers never see it coming. A customer claims your product caused an injury. A hacker steals thousands of customer credit card numbers. A warehouse fire wipes out your entire inventory. Any one of these events without ecommerce business insurance can end your business overnight.
We have worked with online retailers, Amazon FBA sellers, Etsy shop owners and dropshippers across the USA for years. We know which platforms require proof of insurance before you can sell, which risks most online sellers ignore and which policies actually pay when something goes wrong. The right coverage is more affordable than most sellers expect and far cheaper than one uninsured claim.
In this guide, you will learn what ecommerce business insurance covers, how much it costs in 2026 by business size, what Amazon and Etsy require from sellers and how to get covered fast. Every section has real numbers and real answers built for online business owners.
Selling online does not protect you from offline consequences. This problem happens when sellers assume their platform handles liability. It does not. Amazon, Etsy and Shopify protect the marketplace not your business. If a customer gets hurt by your product, the lawsuit comes to you personally.
Ecommerce risks are different from traditional retail. You ship products to strangers. You store customer payment data. You rely on suppliers you have never met. You may run your business from a home office or use a third-party fulfillment center. Each of these creates a specific type of exposure that requires specific coverage.
The cost of one product liability lawsuit or one data breach routinely runs into tens of thousands of dollars. A basic ecommerce insurance package costs a fraction of that often less than $150 per month for smaller stores.
Ecommerce sellers need several types of coverage working together not just one policy. Here is what each one does and why it matters for online retail specifically.
General liability covers third-party bodily injury, property damage and advertising injury claims. This is the foundation for any online seller. Customers struggle to understand that even a purely digital business can face these claims. If you ship a product that injures a buyer, or if a competitor claims your ad copied their content, general liability pays your legal defense and any settlement. Most platforms require $1 million per occurrence / $2 million aggregate minimum.
Product liability covers harm caused specifically by the products you sell. This falls under general liability’s products-completed operations coverage but it is worth understanding separately. This problem happens constantly with Amazon sellers who source products from overseas suppliers. You are legally liable for what you sell, even if you did not manufacture it. One defective item that causes an injury can generate a lawsuit worth far more than your annual revenue.
Cyber liability covers your business when hackers steal customer data or lock your systems with ransomware. This is the most underinsured risk in ecommerce. Every online store collects payment data. Every store is a target. A single breach triggers notification costs, credit monitoring for customers, regulatory fines and potential lawsuits. The average cost of a small business data breach in the USA now exceeds $100,000. Cyber coverage typically runs $300–$1,000 per year for smaller stores a smart trade-off.
Commercial property insurance covers your inventory, equipment and business property against fire, theft and damage. This problem happens when sellers store inventory at home and assume their homeowners policy covers it. It does not homeowners policies cap business property at $2,500 or less. If you use a Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) warehouse or a third-party logistics provider (3PL), verify who holds insurance on your stored goods. The answer often surprises sellers.
A BOP bundles general liability and commercial property into one affordable package. This is the most popular starting point for ecommerce sellers with physical inventory. It often includes business interruption coverage, which replaces lost income if a covered event forces your store offline. Many sellers save 10–20% compared to buying these policies separately.
Amazon, Walmart Marketplace and other platforms now require sellers to carry insurance once they hit certain sales thresholds.
| Platform | Requirement | Minimum Limits |
| Amazon | Required at $10,000/month in sales | $1M per occurrence GL + product liability |
| Walmart Marketplace | Required for approved sellers | $1M per occurrence GL |
| Etsy | Not required but strongly recommended | Seller’s choice |
| Shopify | Not required by platform | Seller’s choice |
Amazon sends sellers a 30-day notice to provide proof of insurance. Missing the deadline can result in account suspension. You can solve this by setting up your policy before you hit the threshold not after the notice arrives.
Most small ecommerce businesses pay $137–$262 per month for a core coverage package. The exact cost depends on your revenue, product type, number of employees and fulfillment model.
| Business Profile | Est. Monthly Cost | Key Policies Included |
| Solo Etsy / Shopify seller (low-risk goods) | $40–$90 | GL + product liability |
| Amazon FBA seller ($10k–$50k/month revenue) | $100–$200 | GL + product liability + cyber |
| Ecommerce store with employees / warehouse | $200–$400+ | BOP + cyber + workers’ comp |
| High-risk products (supplements, electronics) | $300–$600+ | Higher limits + product recall |
Key factors that change your rate:
You can get covered and receive your proof of insurance the same day when you come prepared. Follow these steps:
Amazon requires the COI to list Amazon Services LLC and its affiliates as additional insureds. Getting this wording wrong causes delays. Always confirm the exact language before your 30-day deadline expires.
You can reduce your premium without reducing your protection if you know what to ask for.
Q1: Do I need insurance to sell on Amazon? Yes, Amazon requires proof of insurance once you exceed $10,000 in monthly sales. They give you 30 days to provide a valid certificate of insurance. Failure to comply can result in account suspension.
Q2: Does ecommerce insurance cover dropshipping? Yes, but product liability is critical for dropshippers. You are legally responsible for what you sell, even if a supplier ships directly to your customer. Make sure your GL policy includes products-completed operations coverage for items you do not manufacture yourself.
Q3: What does cyber liability insurance actually cover for an online store? It covers data breach response costs, customer notification, regulatory fines and ransomware recovery. This includes hiring forensic investigators, notifying affected customers and covering legal costs if customers sue over the breach.
Q4: Does my homeowners insurance cover my ecommerce inventory? No homeowners policies cap business property at $2,500 or less. If you store inventory at home, you need a separate commercial property policy or a BOP that covers business goods stored at your residence.
Q5: How fast can I get proof of insurance for my Amazon account? Most carriers issue certificates the same day you buy your policy. Digital COIs are emailed within hours of binding coverage. If you have an Amazon deadline, call your agent and request expedited processing.
Ecommerce business insurance protects your store, your inventory, your customer data and your ability to keep selling. General liability, product liability, cyber coverage and inventory insurance each handle a different type of risk. Amazon and Walmart Marketplace now require proof of insurance and the deadline moves fast. Getting covered before you hit the sales threshold is always smarter than scrambling after a notice arrives.
At OLPolicy, we have helped hundreds of online retailers, Amazon sellers and Etsy shop owners get the right coverage at the right price. We know platform requirements, product liability risks by category and how to structure a policy that actually pays when something goes wrong. We make the process fast and simple.
Call us today at +1 (866) 757-5350. We will review your store, your products and your platform then build the right ecommerce business insurance package for your operation. OLPolicy gets you covered, compliant and back to selling fast.