D and O Insurance

May 27th, 2026   |    By: Ryan RutanCMO    |    Tags: Legal Structure, Board of Directors, Fiduciary Duty, Officers, Indemnification Clause, Employment Agreement

D and O Insurance

D&O Insurance (Directors and Officers Liability Insurance) provides liability coverage for board directors and corporate officers against claims arising from corporate-role decisions. It protects personal assets against lawsuits alleging breach of fiduciary duty, misrepresentation, financial mismanagement, or similar claims, and is typically purchased by the company on behalf of its directors and officers rather than by individuals. It becomes increasingly important as companies grow and attract more litigation exposure, and it's the insurance product that makes serving as a director or officer of a company economically feasible.

The coverage:

What's covered:

  • Defense costs against lawsuits.
  • Settlement payments.
  • Judgments (within policy limits).
  • Investigation costs (sometimes).

Who's covered:

  • Board directors.
  • Corporate officers (C-suite executives).
  • Sometimes employees with policy-making authority.

Common claim types:

  • Breach of fiduciary duty allegations.
  • Securities law violations.
  • Mismanagement claims.
  • Employment practice claims.
  • Cyber/data breach claims (with appropriate riders).

Policy structure:

  • Side A: covers individual directors and officers when company can't indemnify them.
  • Side B: reimburses company for indemnifying directors and officers.
  • Side C: covers the company itself in securities claims.

When companies need D&O insurance:

At venture financing: investors often require D&O insurance as condition of board service.

At Series A typically: companies start D&O coverage at meaningful institutional financing.

Required for board recruitment: serious board candidates require D&O coverage.

Pre-IPO: significantly enhanced coverage required.

Public company: D&O is essential and significantly more expensive.

Coverage levels and costs:

Early-stage (Series A-B): $1M-$5M coverage; $10K-$50K annual premium.

Growth stage (Series C+): $10M-$50M coverage; $50K-$200K annual premium.

Pre-IPO: $50M-$100M+ coverage; significantly more expensive.

Public company: tens of millions in coverage; hundreds of thousands in premium.

Why D&O matters:

Director recruitment: serious independents won't serve without D&O.

Investor protection: investors want their representatives protected.

Officer protection: senior executives need protection from claims.

Company protection: securities claims (Side C) protect company assets.

Ryan's Take

D&O insurance is what lets good people agree to sit on your board and good executives agree to join. Get it at your Series A institutional round, sometimes earlier, and make sure it covers every director and officer, founders included. Review the coverage level with your broker every year as you grow. The premium is moderate. Going without is how you find yourself unable to recruit a board or a CFO.

What founders get wrong: Delaying D&O coverage too long, then struggling to recruit independent directors or facing personal exposure when claims arise. The right discipline: D&O at Series A institutional financing; appropriate coverage as company grows; annual review.

Related: [Board of Directors] · [Fiduciary Duty] · [Officers] · [Indemnification Clause] · [Employment Agreement]

FAQ

What is D&O insurance? Directors and Officers Liability Insurance: provides liability coverage for board directors and corporate officers against claims arising from decisions made in their corporate roles. Typically purchased by company on behalf of directors and officers.

When does a startup need D&O insurance? Typically at Series A institutional financing (investors often require it as condition of board service). Required for serious independent board recruitment. Coverage scales with company stage; pre-IPO requires significantly enhanced coverage.

What does D&O insurance cover? Defense costs against lawsuits, settlement payments, judgments (within limits), and investigation costs. Common claims: breach of fiduciary duty, securities violations, mismanagement, employment practice claims, cyber/data breach (with riders).


About the Author

Ryan Rutan

Founding Partner @ Startups.com platform | Clarity.fm, Launchrock, Fundable, Zirtual, and Co-Host of The Startup Therapy Podcast. Ryan has 15 years of experience as a Founder, Advisor, Mentor, and Investor — the quintessential startup guerrilla. He works with 100's of the best startups every year on everything from ideation, idea validation, early marketing traction, customer acquisition to fundraising, scaling, and operations.

Discuss this Article

Comments
 
Unlock Startups Unlimited

Access 20,000+ Startup Experts, 650+ masterclass videos, 1,000+ in-depth guides, and all the software tools you need to launch and grow quickly.

Already a member? Sign in

Copyright © 2026 Startups.com LLC. All rights reserved.