Business insurance by seller type
Whatever you call your business, you still carry the risk.
Reseller, dropshipper, private-label brand, importer, wholesaler. Being in the chain of distribution means a product you sold can create a claim against you, even if you did not make it. Find your model.
Business insurance for resellers
Yes. A reseller buys finished products and sells them on, but still sits in the chain of distribution, so a defective product you resold can put your business on the hook for injury or damage. 'I only resell it' is not a legal defense, which is why product liability insurance matters for resellers.
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Business insurance for dropshippers
Usually, yes. A dropshipper never physically handles the product, but still sells it and sits in the chain of distribution, so a defective item shipped straight from a supplier can still create a liability claim against your store. Not touching the goods does not remove your exposure.
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Business insurance for private-label sellers
Yes, and often most of all. When you sell products under your own brand, you are treated like the manufacturer for liability purposes, even if a factory actually made them. That puts private-label sellers at the front of the line for product-injury claims, so product liability insurance is essential.
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Business insurance for print-on-demand sellers
Usually, yes. Print-on-demand sellers combine a product-liability exposure (the base garment or item can be defective) with an advertising and intellectual-property exposure (custom designs). General and product liability coverage handles both sides of that risk for POD businesses.
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Business insurance for wholesalers
Yes. Wholesalers and distributors sit squarely in the chain of distribution and move large volumes, so a single defective batch can create significant exposure. On top of that, the retailers you sell to almost always require a Certificate of Insurance naming them as additional insured before they will stock you.
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Business insurance for importers
Yes, and it is especially important. When you import goods, you can be treated as the responsible party in the United States because the overseas manufacturer is often out of reach of a claim. That makes importers a primary target for product-liability suits, and many traditional policies exclude foreign-made goods.
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Business insurance for DTC brands
Yes. Direct-to-consumer brands sell their own products with no marketplace between them and the customer, so 100% of the product-liability risk sits with the brand. There is no third party to share the exposure, which makes product liability insurance a foundational cost of running a DTC business.
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Business insurance for online retailers
Yes. An online retailer selling physical products is part of the chain of distribution, so a defective product can create a claim against the store regardless of who made it. Product and general liability insurance is the base coverage, with a Certificate of Insurance available whenever a marketplace or buyer asks.
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One policy, priced on your real sales.
Product liability insurance for eCommerce sellers, with a marketplace-ready Certificate of Insurance whenever a platform or buyer asks. Starts at $26/mo.
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