EPLI- What every growing business should know! Part 2
What Employment Practices Liability Insurance Covers
Employment Practices Liability Insurance is built around the employment relationship. It may help cover legal defense costs, settlements, or judgments tied to covered workplace claims.
A policy may respond to claims involving:
- Wrongful termination
- Discrimination
- Sexual harassment
- Retaliation
- Failure to hire
- Failure to promote
- Wrongful discipline
- Negligent evaluation
- Employment-related defamation
- Invasion of privacy
The International Risk Management Institute identifies wrongful termination, discrimination, sexual harassment, and retaliation as common EPLI claim types. It also notes that policies may cover other employment-related conduct, such as defamation, invasion of privacy, failure to promote, and negligent evaluation. [3]
Here is a simple example.
An employee is fired after repeated performance issues. The owner knows the decision was based on the work. But the former employee claims the firing was discriminatory or retaliatory.
Even if the business did nothing wrong, it may still need to respond. That could mean attorney fees, agency filings, a demand letter, or a lawsuit.
That is one of the most important parts of EPLI. A claim does not have to be successful to be expensive. IRMI notes that EPLI policies contain shrinking limits provisions. That means defense costs, which are often a substantial part of a claim, reduce the policy's available limits. [3]
Some EPLI policies also cover claims from job applicants. This matters if someone says they were not hired because of age, disability, pregnancy, race, gender, religion, or another protected category.
Some policies include third-party coverage too. This may help if a customer, client, or vendor claims harassment or discrimination by someone at the business. Not every policy includes it, so owners should ask.



