Every business owner buys insurance assuming the policy will work when needed. Most policies do. But a meaningful percentage of commercial first-party claims — claims a business files with its own insurer for its own losses — end with the business recovering far less than the actual loss, or nothing at all.

This is not always because the carrier acted improperly. It is often because the structure of first-party claims rewards carriers and penalizes policyholders in ways that most business owners don’t see until the check arrives. Understanding those structural dynamics is essential to actually getting paid on a commercial claim.

What Counts as a First-Party Claim

A first-party claim is a claim you file with your own insurer, under your own policy, for a loss your business suffered. The business is the “first party.” The insurer is the “second party.”

This is different from liability claims, where a third party sues your business and your liability carrier defends you. Liability claims involve carriers and insureds working together against an outside claimant. First-party claims involve the business and the carrier on opposite sides from the start.

The difference matters because the carrier’s interests are structurally adverse in a first-party claim in a way they are not in a liability claim. The carrier wants to pay less; the business wants to be paid in full. Both can be acting in good faith and the interests still diverge.

The Common First-Party Claims Businesses File

For most commercial policyholders, first-party claims fall into a few categories:

  • Property damage — Fire, wind, hail, water damage, vandalism, equipment breakdown, or other physical loss to business property
  • Business interruption — Lost income and continuing expenses when a covered property loss forces the business to suspend operations
  • Extra expense — Additional costs the business incurs to keep operating during recovery
  • Cyber and data loss — First-party costs from a cyber event, including business interruption from the event itself
  • Crime and employee dishonesty — Losses from theft, fraud, or fidelity events
  • Builders risk — Losses during construction projects

Each of these has its own coverage structure, its own common dispute patterns, and its own valuation challenges. What they share is the basic dynamic: the business paid premiums, suffered a loss, and is asking the carrier to honor a contract the carrier wrote.

Where Commercial Policyholders Lose Money

A few patterns recur in first-party commercial claim disputes.

The valuation gap. Carrier estimates and contractor estimates often diverge significantly. The carrier’s pricing data may lag actual market pricing. The carrier’s adjuster may not have inspected the property as thoroughly as the contractor did. Depreciation calculations involve discretion that the carrier applies in its own favor.

The business interruption calculation. BI claims turn on what the business would have earned during the period of restoration — a counterfactual that requires assumptions about trends, seasonality, and operational ramp-up. Carriers and businesses frequently produce dramatically different numbers from the same financial records. The business that does not engage a forensic accountant early typically ends up arguing against the carrier’s accountant from a weaker evidentiary position.

The proof requirements. Most commercial policies require sworn proof of loss within a defined period. Many require documentation of pre-loss financial performance, asset inventories, and operational records that the business may not have maintained at the level required. Documentation gaps that did not matter before the loss become carrier leverage after it.

The deadline structure. Commercial policies frequently contain suit-limitation clauses shorter than the general statute of limitations for written contracts. A business that waits to consult counsel until after extended negotiations with the carrier sometimes discovers the suit deadline has passed.

The asymmetry of resources. Carriers are repeat players with claims departments, coverage counsel, and forensic accountants on retainer. The business is usually a one-time player negotiating against opponents that handle thousands of similar disputes. The carrier knows how often businesses fold, and the carrier prices its positions accordingly.

The Illinois Regulatory Framework

Illinois regulates first-party claim handling through the Illinois Insurance Code and the Illinois Administrative Code, with specific timing and disclosure requirements that apply to carriers. Acknowledgment must be prompt. Investigation must begin promptly. Denials must be in writing and must identify the specific policy language relied on.

These rules do not give policyholders a direct private lawsuit, but they create a documentary record. Carriers that fail to meet regulatory standards in their handling of a claim build a record that can support extracontractual exposure later, including under Section 155 of the Illinois Insurance Code, which authorizes attorney fees, costs, and statutory damages for vexatious and unreasonable conduct.

The Illinois Department of Insurance handles regulatory complaints and publishes annual reports on claim-handling complaints by carrier and line of business. For business owners trying to understand how a particular carrier behaves in disputes, that data is available and useful.

A more detailed breakdown of how the framework applies to denied and underpaid claims is available in this guide to first-party property insurance claims in Illinois, which covers the homeowner-side mechanics that share substantial overlap with commercial claims.

What Business Owners Should Do Differently

The businesses that recover full value on first-party claims share a few habits.

They maintain documentation as if a claim were imminent. Financial records, asset registers, contracts, operational documentation, and revenue history maintained at audit-ready quality become the evidentiary foundation for any future claim. Businesses that do this routinely do not have to scramble after a loss.

They read the policy at issuance, not at claim time. Endorsements, sublimits, exclusions, and definitions matter. The policy that is right for the premium quoted may not be the policy that responds to the actual loss the business faces. Reviewing policy language with someone who can evaluate it independently of the broker who placed it is rare but valuable.

They identify coverage counsel before the loss occurs. Coverage litigation is a specialized practice. The carrier’s coverage counsel is engaged from the moment a claim becomes contested. The business that does not engage parallel expertise until weeks or months later is negotiating from a position the carrier has already mapped.

They engage forensic accounting expertise early on BI claims. Business interruption claims live or die on the financial analysis. A business that engages its own forensic accountant before the carrier’s accountant produces its number can shape the analysis. A business that waits to respond to the carrier’s number is reacting from a defensive position.

They preserve all communications in writing. Phone conversations with adjusters that go undocumented effectively don’t exist when the dispute develops. Carriers document everything internally. Policyholders that match that discipline create records that can be used; policyholders that don’t create asymmetric records that favor the carrier.

The Practical Reality

For commercial policyholders, first-party claims are not a clerical process. They are an adversarial negotiation in which the carrier holds the disputed funds, controls the timeline, and has substantially more experience with the process than the business does.

The framework exists to make that negotiation fair. Regulatory standards, statutory remedies for unreasonable conduct, and the policy contract itself all give policyholders tools. Whether those tools get used depends on whether the business owner understood, before the loss, what was actually at stake.

The carrier is calculating from day one. The business that starts calculating only after the denial arrives is starting the calculation years late.

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Olivia is a contributing writer at CEOColumn.com, where she explores leadership strategies, business innovation, and entrepreneurial insights shaping today’s corporate world. With a background in business journalism and a passion for executive storytelling, Olivia delivers sharp, thought-provoking content that inspires CEOs, founders, and aspiring leaders alike. When she’s not writing, Olivia enjoys analyzing emerging business trends and mentoring young professionals in the startup ecosystem.

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