COMMON E&O INSURANCE CLAIMS AND EXAMPLES
A comprehensive breakdown of the most common Errors & Omissions claims, where they originate, how they develop over time, and which industries face which claim categories most heavily. Includes real-world claim examples and severity ranking.
MOST E&O CLAIMS FALL INTO 10 RECURRING CATEGORIES
E&O CLAIMS tend to repeat across industries: missed deadlines, scope disputes, advice that turned out wrong, documentation errors, conflicts of interest, and breach of duty allegations. The specific facts vary by profession — but the structural categories cluster into a predictable set. Understanding these patterns is the first step to risk management.
CLAIM SEVERITY × FREQUENCY HEAT MAP
A 2D plot of common E&O claim categories by how often they occur (frequency) and how costly they tend to be when they hit (severity).
PLOT OF CLAIM CATEGORIES
TOP 10 MOST COMMON E&O CLAIM CATEGORIES
Ranked by relative frequency across industries — with frequency intensity bars showing how dominant each category is in claims data.
ANATOMY OF A TYPICAL CLAIM TIMELINE
How an E&O claim typically develops from the underlying incident through resolution — with typical timeframes for each stage.
WHERE E&O CLAIMS ORIGINATE
The breakdown of who actually files E&O claims against professionals — clients, third parties, regulators, and others.
CLAIMS BY INDUSTRY — DOMINANT PATTERNS
The claim categories that dominate E&O activity for specific professions.
INSURANCE AGENTS
PATTERN A- FAILURE TO PROCURE — agent didn't bind requested coverage
- WRONG COVERAGE — placed policy didn't match client's needs
- MISSED RENEWAL — coverage lapsed without notification
- POLICY MISREPRESENTATION — coverage explained inaccurately
REAL ESTATE
PATTERN B- DISCLOSURE FAILURES — material defects not disclosed to buyer
- MISREPRESENTATION — incorrect property characteristics or status
- FIDUCIARY DUTY BREACH — undisclosed conflicts or dual representation
- CONTRACT ERRORS — drafting mistakes or missed contingencies
ATTORNEYS
PATTERN C- MISSED STATUTE — failure to file within limitations period
- NEGLIGENT ADVICE — advice that caused client financial harm
- CONFLICT OF INTEREST — undisclosed dual representation
- SCOPE DISPUTES — what was within engagement
ARCHITECTS & ENGINEERS
PATTERN D- DESIGN ERRORS — defects in drawings, specs, calculations
- CODE COMPLIANCE — violations identified post-construction
- CONSTRUCTABILITY — design that couldn't be built as drawn
- SCOPE / SERVICES — what was within professional services
CPAs / ACCOUNTANTS
PATTERN E- TAX RETURN ERRORS — preparation mistakes causing penalties
- AUDIT FAILURES — undetected fraud or material misstatements
- ADVISORY NEGLIGENCE — wrong tax planning or business advice
- MISSED DEADLINES — late filings, extensions, payments
TECHNOLOGY
PATTERN F- FAILURE TO PERFORM — software didn't meet specifications
- SECURITY INCIDENTS — breach in delivered tech causing harm
- SLA VIOLATIONS — service level commitments not met
- IP CLAIMS — alleged infringement in delivered work
PATTERNS THAT REPEAT ACROSS INDUSTRIES
Despite different professions, certain claim patterns repeat — and recognizing them is the foundation of risk management.
THE STRUCTURAL PATTERNS REPEAT across professions even when the specific facts vary. A missed deadline at a law firm causing limitations to run looks structurally identical to a missed renewal at an insurance agency causing a coverage gap. A scope dispute with an architect looks structurally identical to a scope dispute with a consultant. The categories converge — only the specific facts diverge.
This is why RISK MANAGEMENT TENDS TO TRANSFER across professions. Documented engagement letters, clear scope language, calendared deadline systems, supervised file reviews, and disciplined client communication protect against the same structural failure modes regardless of profession. The specific tools differ — the principles do not.
Reviewing the categories above against your own operations is the starting point. Where do you have exposure? Which categories represent the largest threats? What controls do you have in place? A specialty broker can help map the exposure profile and structure coverage that responds to the patterns most relevant to your specific practice.
RELATED COVERAGES & RESOURCES
Other educational pages and coverage resources that build on this claims guide.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Common questions about E&O Insurance claims and claim patterns.
WHAT'S THE MOST COMMON E&O CLAIM CATEGORY?
Negligent advice or service is consistently the most common E&O claim category across industries. The structural pattern — alleged failure to meet the standard of care causing client financial loss — repeats across professions even though the specific facts vary by industry.
WHO TYPICALLY FILES E&O CLAIMS?
Most E&O claims come from direct clients — current and former clients of the professional. A meaningful share comes from third parties who relied on the professional's work without being direct clients. Regulators and licensing boards account for a smaller but significant share, particularly in licensed professions.
HOW LONG DOES AN E&O CLAIM TYPICALLY TAKE TO RESOLVE?
Resolution timelines vary widely. Simple claims may resolve in months through early settlement or dismissal. Complex litigated matters can extend 1–3 years or longer. Regulatory matters may resolve faster but have their own procedural timelines.
WHEN SHOULD I REPORT A POTENTIAL CLAIM TO MY CARRIER?
As soon as practicable. Most claims-made policies require prompt notice of claims and circumstances that may give rise to claims. Late notice can prejudice the carrier's defense and may give the carrier grounds to deny coverage. When in doubt, report.
WHAT'S A "CIRCUMSTANCE" VS A "CLAIM"?
A claim is typically a written demand for monetary or non-monetary relief. A circumstance is an event that may give rise to a claim — for example, a client expressing dissatisfaction without yet making a formal demand. Most policies allow circumstances to be reported during the policy period to lock in coverage even if the claim materializes later.
DOES MY POLICY COVER GROUNDLESS SUITS?
Yes. Most E&O policies provide defense coverage even for claims that turn out to be groundless. The carrier defends the claim through dismissal, summary judgment, or favorable verdict. Defense costs are paid regardless of the eventual outcome — though they may reduce available limits depending on policy form.
ARE FEE DISPUTES COVERED BY E&O?
Generally not as direct claims. However, when fee disputes generate counterclaims alleging professional negligence, those counterclaims are typically covered. Many policies exclude pure fee disputes and the disgorgement of fees the insured received.
DO REGULATORY MATTERS REQUIRE E&O REPORTING?
Often yes. Many licensing board complaints, regulatory investigations, and enforcement actions trigger E&O policy obligations. Some policies provide affirmative regulatory defense sublimits. Failure to report regulatory matters can prejudice subsequent civil claims that arise from the same conduct.
WHAT'S THE BEST WAY TO REDUCE CLAIM RISK?
Disciplined engagement letters, clear scope language, calendared deadline systems, documented file reviews, supervised work product, and disciplined client communication. Most claims are tied to documentation gaps or scope ambiguity — disciplined documentation and clear scope are the highest-leverage controls.
WILL ONE CLAIM AFFECT MY RENEWAL PRICING?
Often yes. Carriers consider claims history at renewal. A single significant claim can result in premium increases, restrictions, or non-renewal depending on the circumstances. A specialty broker can help present the matter favorably and remarket the account if needed.