Assureful

South Carolina insurance guide

Product liability insurance for your South Carolina Amazon or Shopify business

A practical state page for your third-party seller business, built around store data, product category, COI requests, and why Amazon or Shopify does not replace your own product liability policy.

42%

average savings

$26

starting monthly

Yes

license listed

TLDR

If you're a South Carolina seller, start here.

01

You should treat South Carolina context as one layer of the quote, not the whole insurance decision.

02

The current illustrative monthly premium signal for South Carolina is $51, compared with a national baseline of $53.

03

South Carolina's sales tax context is 6%, which can matter for seller planning even though tax is separate from insurance coverage.

04

Assureful license information is listed for South Carolina.

05

State pages should be paired with category pages because skincare, supplements, baby products, electronics, and pet products create different insurance questions.

State comparison

South Carolina context versus the national baseline.

These are planning signals, not a final quote. The real price still depends on product category, monthly sales, claims history, limits, and underwriting review.

Illustrative premium signal

South Carolina

$51/mo

National

$53/mo baseline

South Carolina is currently near the national baseline; product category and sales volume still matter more than the state signal alone.

Sales tax planning context

South Carolina

6%

National

5.1% average signal

Tax context is not insurance coverage, but it can help you think through where your business is based, where you sell, and how your state-specific planning should be documented.

License signal

South Carolina

License listed: 3001242424

National

Assureful supports US seller workflows

License data helps confirm regulatory context, but the policy still has to fit products, channels, limits, and buyer wording.

Category overlay

South Carolina

State page plus category page

National

Generic state-only page

The strongest page match combines state, platform, and product niche instead of swapping only the state name.

What changes by state

State-specific does not mean state-only.

Your state matters, but it should be tied to what you sell, the channels you use, and the proof of insurance your buyers or marketplaces ask you to provide.

01

Business location

Your South Carolina business address can affect licensing, policy administration, taxes, and notices.

02

Buyer requirements

Amazon, retailers, suppliers, and wholesalers may ask for specific limits, wording, or Additional Insured treatment.

03

Legal environment

State law, venue, and claim patterns can influence how product claims are handled after a dispute starts.

04

Product category

The product you sell usually matters more than the state alone. Supplements, skincare, baby products, electronics, and pet products need different review.

Research notes

What this means for your South Carolina seller account.

Selling on Amazon or Shopify does not place your products under Amazon's insurance or a marketplace safety net. If your product injures a customer or damages property, your business can still be pulled into the claim.

01

You should know that amazon still maintains its position that it is not legally liable for selling defective products. It does appear that the company is taking a ...

02

You should know that amazon can be held liable for defective products that they sell from third parties on its Marketplace and are “Fulfilled by Amazon.

03

Proving liability involves demonstrating the product was defective, the defect caused your injury, and Amazon played a role in selling or ...

04

You should know that i argue that there is a compelling argument that Amazon is liable for defective third-party goods because it is a merchant seller under § 2-. 314 of the Uniform ...

05

Amazon requires product liability insurance once your monthly sales exceed $10,000, regardless of which state you're based in. Shopify doesn't require it ...

06

Selling through Amazon, Shopify, or your own website doesn't reduce your liability. ... Amazon frequently requires proof of insurance before approving sellers.

07

Product liability insurance protects against claims from adverse effects, ensuring you can cover legal costs and settlements without jeopardizing your business.

08

You should know that it is a body of law designed around contracts and is intended to address economic loss and damage to the product itself, not personal injuries or death.

09

You should know that amazon requires a "Certificate of Insurance (COI)" for sales exceeding 10,000. To obtain this, a commercial liability insurance is needed ...

10

Amazon requires all you to obtain product liability insurance after reaching $10,000 in sales in one month via Amazon's US marketplace. Not only ...

Licensing

Assureful license information for South Carolina.

Assureful, Inc. is listed for South Carolina under license number 3001242424. View full license information.

Policy checklist

What a Shopify or Amazon product liability policy should include.

Do not stop at a quote number. The policy should fit the product, the channel, the buyer requirements, and the paperwork your business will actually need.

Product liability

Covered bodily injury and property damage claims tied to products sold through Amazon, Shopify, wholesale, or other supported channels.

Legal defense

Defense costs for covered product claims, including claims that are disputed or never reach trial.

Certificates

Certificate of Insurance support for marketplaces, wholesale buyers, retail partners, suppliers, and Additional Insured requests.

Category fit

Clear treatment of your product category, including ingredients, safety exposure, use case, manufacturing, imports, and claims language.

Channel fit

A policy path that understands you may move between Shopify, Amazon, TikTok Shop, wholesale, and retail buyers.

Case research

Real cases that show seller exposure.

These examples are not legal advice. They show why your own product liability policy matters when you sell on Amazon, Shopify, wholesale, or another channel.

01

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit - 2019

Fox v. Amazon.com, Inc.

Why it matters for South Carolina
National marketplace example involving warnings, batteries, and property damage.
What was disputed
A hoverboard bought through Amazon allegedly caused a house fire; the court addressed product-liability and warning theories against Amazon.
Outcome
The Sixth Circuit revived part of the warning-related claim while rejecting other theories.
Seller takeaway
Powered products, electronics, toys, and battery-backed goods can create both injury and property-damage exposure.
View source

02

California Court of Appeal - 2020

Bolger v. Amazon.com, LLC

Why it matters for South Carolina
California marketplace and product-distribution analysis for a product sold through Amazon.
What was disputed
A customer alleged a replacement laptop battery purchased through Amazon exploded and caused severe burn injuries.
Outcome
The court held Amazon could be treated as part of the chain of distribution for strict liability purposes and reversed summary judgment for Amazon.
Seller takeaway
California sellers should not assume marketplace distance removes product-liability questions after a product injury.
View source

Questions

What to ask before you apply.

Do South Carolina Amazon and Shopify sellers need product liability insurance?+

You may need product liability insurance because Amazon, wholesale buyers, retail partners, suppliers, or lenders can ask you for proof of coverage. Shopify may not require coverage just to run a store, but you still need your own policy once your products create real customer exposure or buyer requirements.

What should a South Carolina eCommerce product liability policy include?+

Look for product liability coverage, general liability where appropriate, legal defense for covered claims, COI support, Additional Insured handling, marketplace-ready proof of insurance, and clear exclusions for the product categories you sell.

Is Assureful licensed for South Carolina sellers?+

Yes. Assureful has state licensing information for South Carolina, and the license details are linked from this page.

Does the buyer's state matter if my business is based in South Carolina?+

Your business location matters for licensing and policy administration, but claims can involve customers, venues, or counterparties outside South Carolina. Make sure your policy supports where you sell and the channels you use.

Can a South Carolina seller use one policy for Amazon and Shopify?+

That is usually the goal if you sell across more than one channel. Your policy should support your business, product category, and proof-of-insurance requirements across Amazon, Shopify, wholesale, and other supported channels.

What is the difference between general liability and product liability?+

General liability is the broader commercial liability policy area. Product liability focuses on covered bodily injury or property damage claims tied to products you sell. If you sell physical products online, product liability and COI support are usually the pieces you need to inspect closely.

What can slow down a quote?+

Unsupported product claims, unclear manufacturing details, recent claims, unresolved recalls, missing supplier information, or unusual buyer wording can add review time before a quote is sent.

Are South Carolina state pages a replacement for category pages?+

No. This page explains local context. Category pages explain product risk. Your questions can be very different if you sell skincare, supplements, electronics, baby products, or pet products, even when your business is based in the same state.

References

Sources used for state case examples.

Review these source links if you want to understand the legal background behind the insurance notes on this page.

  1. 01

    Fox v. Amazon.com, Inc.

    Justia case opinion. Used to explain what this can mean for your South Carolina third-party seller business.

  2. 02

    Bolger v. Amazon.com, LLC

    FindLaw case opinion. Used to explain what this can mean for your South Carolina third-party seller business.

  3. 03

    Can Amazon be Held Responsible for Defective Products ...

    Case-law research result. Amazon still maintains its position that it is not legally liable for selling defective products. It does appear that the company is taking a ...

  4. 04

    Is Amazon Liable For Defective Products?

    Case-law research result. Amazon can be held liable for defective products that they sell from third parties on its Marketplace and are “Fulfilled by Amazon.

  5. 05

    How Amazon Product Liability Affects Injury Victims in 2026

    Case-law research result. Proving liability involves demonstrating the product was defective, the defect caused your injury, and Amazon played a role in selling or ...

  6. 06

    Negligent Undertaking Claim Against Amazon May ...

    Case-law research result. (Amazon) can be liable for negligent undertaking claims when products sold on its website are defective. In Johnson, the Plaintiff, Joshua ...

  7. 07

    Strict Liability for Defective Products Sold on Amazon's E ...

    Case-law research result. ... Amazon wants the sellers to be held responsible for their defective products, it should require more of the sellers it allows to ...

  8. 08

    AMAZON AS A SELLER OF MARKETPLACE GOODS ...

    Case-law research result. I argue that there is a compelling argument that Amazon is liable for defective third-party goods because it is a merchant seller under § 2-. 314 of the Uniform ...

  9. 09

    South Carolina Product Liability Insurance for Amazon & ...

    Case-law research result. Amazon requires product liability insurance once your monthly sales exceed $10,000, regardless of which state you're based in. Shopify doesn't require it ...

  10. 10

    South Carolina Product Liability Insurance | Protect Your ...

    Case-law research result. Selling through Amazon, Shopify, or your own website doesn't reduce your liability. ... Amazon frequently requires proof of insurance before approving sellers.

  11. 11

    Get Comprehensive Product Liability Quotes For Online Sellers

    Case-law research result. Product liability insurance protects against claims from adverse effects, ensuring you can cover legal costs and settlements without jeopardizing your business.

  12. 12

    Fundamentals of Ecommerce Product Liability

    Case-law research result. It is a body of law designed around contracts and is intended to address economic loss and damage to the product itself, not personal injuries or death.

  13. 13

    Amazon insurance requirements for sellers

    Case-law research result. Amazon requires a "Certificate of Insurance (COI)" for sales exceeding 10,000. To obtain this, a commercial liability insurance is needed ...

  14. 14

    Product Liability Insurance for Amazon Sellers

    Case-law research result. Amazon requires all you to obtain product liability insurance after reaching $10,000 in sales in one month via Amazon's US marketplace. Not only ...

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