Jewellery Insurance Guide
A practical South African guide to understanding the key insurance risks, typical cover needs, and common buying considerations for jewellery businesses.
6 min read
Key Takeaways
- Jewellery businesses face a mix of liability, asset, contractual, and interruption risks depending on how they operate.
- Public Liability is often a core starting point where customers, visitors, client sites, or third parties are involved.
- Professional Indemnity may be important where advice, design, compliance, planning, or specialist services are provided.
- Stock, equipment, premises, and interruption exposures should be reviewed alongside liability rather than treated separately.
- Higher-risk or specialist classes may need referral underwriting and more detailed business information before terms are offered.
How to think about insurance for Jewellery
1. Understand your operating risk
Start by looking at how the jewellery business actually trades. Consider whether work is done on client premises, from fixed business premises, online, at events, or across multiple sites.
2. Match insurance to the real exposure
Liability cover is only one part of the picture. Equipment, stock, vehicles, interruption to trading, staff exposures, and contractual obligations may all need to be considered together.
3. Check whether the class is specialist
Some business types fall into higher-hazard or referral underwriting categories. In those cases, clear disclosure of activities, controls, and claims history is especially important.
4. Review client and landlord requirements
Customers, venues, landlords, contractors, and tenders may require specific liability limits or proof of insurance before work can begin.
5. Keep values and limits realistic
Understated stock, asset values, or indemnity limits can leave a business short at claim stage. Review insured values as the business grows or changes.
Insurance Checklist for Jewellery
- Public Liability requirements and desired indemnity limit
- Professional Indemnity needs if advice, planning, design, or regulated services are involved
- Declared stock, tools, equipment, and business contents values
- Premises details, security controls, and whether customers or visitors attend the site
- Staff, subcontractor, and employer-related exposures
- Claims history, contractual insurance requirements, and business interruption considerations
Frequently Asked Questions
What insurance does a jewellery business usually need?
That depends on the exact activities, but Public Liability, property-related cover, business interruption, and sometimes Professional Indemnity are common starting points.
Is Public Liability always enough on its own?
Not always. Many businesses also need cover for stock, tools, equipment, interruption, cyber exposure, or professional advice depending on how they operate.
Why do some businesses need specialist underwriting?
Higher-hazard, unusual, regulated, or loss-sensitive classes often need more detailed underwriting before insurers can confirm appetite and terms.
What information helps when requesting a quote?
Prepare a clear business description, turnover, staff numbers, premises details, asset values, claims history, and any client or tender insurance requirements.
Need help with Jewellery insurance?
We can help you compare cover options and structure insurance around the way your business actually operates.