ZOO & AQUARIUM INSURANCE COST & COVERAGE GUIDE

Zoo & Aquarium Insurance Cost & Coverage Guide

Coverage factors, underwriting questions, and risk details that shape insurance for zoos, aquariums, safari parks, sanctuaries, and wildlife attractions.

Zoo and aquarium insurance cost cannot be answered responsibly with a generic online number. The coverage review depends on the actual operation: animal species, dangerous animal exposure, visitor access, animal encounters, aquarium systems, tanks, pumps, filtration, safari routes, staff vehicles, property values, equipment breakdown, business income, workers’ compensation, prior claims, and carrier appetite. This guide explains the factors that influence underwriting without pretending every wildlife attraction fits the same pricing box.

Animal Exposurespecies, dangerous animals, contact, containment, transport
Public Accessattendance, tours, events, encounters, schools, concessions
Property Systemstanks, filtration, HVAC, enclosures, gates, backup power
Loss Historyclaims, incidents, non-renewals, restrictions, corrective action
Zoo and aquarium insurance cost and coverage guide symbolic protection visual for wildlife attraction underwriting and coverage factors
No fake rate chart. The right answer depends on the animals, visitors, property, systems, claims, and required coverage.
FASTEST WAY TO START Use the animal services intake form so the insurance review starts with real underwriting facts: species, visitors, property, tanks, vehicles, employees, animal contact, current policies, and claim history.
OPEN INTAKE FORM
COST FACTORS WITHOUT GUESSWORK

Wildlife attraction insurance pricing starts with the operation, not a canned estimate

A small educational wildlife center, public zoo, drive-through safari park, aquarium with life-support systems, wildlife sanctuary, animal encounter exhibit, and exotic game farm all create different coverage questions. Two attractions may have similar attendance but completely different underwriting profiles because of species, systems, property values, animal contact, staffing, vehicles, and prior claims.

A useful insurance review starts with the facts that carriers actually need: what animals are involved, how visitors interact with the attraction, what property and equipment must be protected, whether dangerous animals are present, what systems keep animals safe, what employees and volunteers do, what vehicles are used, and what losses or restrictions already exist.

Major factors that can affect the insurance review

  • Animal species, animal count, dangerous animals, public-facing animals, and animal-care procedures
  • Visitor access, attendance, tours, school groups, private events, concessions, gift shops, and public programs
  • Animal encounters, feeding programs, touch tanks, photo opportunities, safari routes, and guest vehicle exposure
  • Property values, enclosures, gates, fencing, tanks, filtration, pumps, HVAC, refrigeration, and backup power
  • Employees, volunteers, keepers, handlers, divers, guides, drivers, educators, seasonal staff, and contractors
  • Commercial auto, staff vehicles, trams, shuttles, carts, animal transport, and hired/non-owned auto exposure
  • Prior claims, animal incidents, visitor injuries, employee injuries, property losses, non-renewals, and restrictions
INTERACTIVE COVERAGE COST DRIVER DIAL

Choose the underwriting factor. See why it can change the coverage conversation.

This tool does not calculate premium. It shows the facts that can move a zoo, aquarium, safari park, sanctuary, or wildlife attraction from simple to complicated.

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ANIMAL SPECIES The species list can change the entire underwriting path.

Carriers need to understand which animals are present, which animals are public-facing, whether dangerous species are involved, how animals are contained, whether animals are transported, and whether visitors can touch, feed, view, or drive near them.

Coverage area affected General liability, dangerous animal liability, animal care, property, and umbrella coverage.
Information that helps Species list, animal count, dangerous species, containment, public contact, transport, and prior incidents.
COVERAGE CATEGORIES

What may be included in a zoo, aquarium, or wildlife attraction insurance program

A wildlife attraction insurance program may involve several policies or coverage parts. The goal is not to buy every possible coverage name. The goal is to identify the real risk: animals, visitors, property, people, vehicles, systems, events, contracts, and claim history.

General Liability

Reviews visitor injury, premises liability, tours, walkways, parking, gift shops, concessions, vendors, events, school groups, and non-auto third-party liability allegations.

General liability information

Dangerous Animal Liability

Reviews dangerous species, animal contact, containment, bites, attacks, escapes, animal zones, handler controls, public proximity, and higher-risk animal operations.

Dangerous animal liability page

Property & Equipment Breakdown

Reviews tanks, pumps, filtration, HVAC, refrigeration, gates, fencing, enclosures, habitats, backup power, ticket booths, gift shops, concessions, and critical attraction systems.

Property & equipment page

Business Income & Extra Expense

Reviews revenue interruption, animal relocation, temporary repairs, emergency vendors, attraction shutdowns, event cancellation concerns, reopening pressure, and seasonal revenue issues after a covered property loss.

Review business income

Workers’ Compensation

Reviews keepers, aquarists, divers, handlers, guides, drivers, volunteers, maintenance employees, educators, concession staff, seasonal workers, and animal-care job duties.

Review employee exposure

Auto, Cyber, D&O, EPLI & Umbrella

Additional coverage may be needed for staff vehicles, safari routes, animal transport, ticketing systems, donor data, board decisions, employee allegations, contracts, and higher liability limits.

Umbrella information
WILDLIFE ATTRACTION TYPES

Different animal attractions create different underwriting questions

Zoos Aquariums Safari parks Drive-through animal parks Wildlife sanctuaries Animal rescue facilities Exotic animal farms Game farms Animal encounter exhibits Interactive animal attractions Marine life attractions Educational wildlife centers Hard-to-place wildlife attractions Public animal exhibits

Information to prepare before requesting zoo or aquarium insurance terms

  • Legal entity name, ownership structure, location count, operating season, attendance, and revenue categories
  • Animal species list, animal count, dangerous animals, public-facing animals, and animal-care procedures
  • Visitor activities, tours, animal encounters, feeding programs, school groups, camps, events, concessions, and gift shops
  • Property schedule, buildings, habitats, tanks, enclosures, fencing, gates, barriers, and public-area values
  • Equipment schedule, filtration, pumps, HVAC, refrigeration, backup power, vehicles, trams, shuttles, and carts
  • Employee roles, volunteer duties, handlers, keepers, aquarists, divers, guides, drivers, educators, and contractors
  • Current policies, limits, endorsements, exclusions, additional insured requirements, and contract requirements
  • Loss runs, open claims, claim narratives, non-renewals, declinations, restrictions, and corrective action details
BETTER FACTS, BETTER REVIEW

A complete submission is stronger than a generic cost question

Wildlife attraction insurance terms depend on how clearly the operation is presented. Underwriters need to understand the species, public access, animal contact, property values, equipment systems, staff duties, vehicle use, prior claims, and risk controls before they can evaluate the account.

Kelly Insurance Group helps prepare the account so the market sees the full operation instead of a thin application. That matters for zoos, aquariums, safari parks, sanctuaries, animal encounters, exotic farms, and hard-to-place wildlife operations with prior claims or carrier restrictions.

QUOTE PROCESS

How to make the zoo or aquarium insurance review cleaner

01 Define The Attraction

Separate zoo, aquarium, safari, sanctuary, rescue, exotic farm, encounter, education, and event operations.

02 Map Animal Exposure

List species, dangerous animals, containment, animal contact, transport, feeding programs, and public proximity.

03 Schedule The Property

Document tanks, systems, enclosures, gates, fencing, buildings, equipment, vehicles, business income, and backup plans.

04 Explain The History

Use loss runs, claim narratives, restrictions, corrective action, current controls, and deadlines to clarify the account.

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FAQ

Zoo & Aquarium Insurance Cost & Coverage Questions

Can zoo or aquarium insurance cost be estimated without reviewing the operation?

A reliable review requires operation details. Species, visitor access, dangerous animal exposure, animal contact, property values, tanks, equipment, employees, vehicles, prior claims, required limits, and carrier appetite can all affect underwriting. A generic estimate may miss the actual coverage issues.

What coverages should a zoo or aquarium consider?

A zoo or aquarium may need general liability, dangerous animal liability, commercial property, equipment breakdown, business income, animal care or animal bailee coverage, workers’ compensation, commercial auto, cyber liability, employment practices liability, D&O, event liability, and umbrella or excess liability depending on the operation.

Why do aquarium systems affect the coverage review?

Aquariums may depend on tanks, pumps, filtration, water quality controls, HVAC, refrigeration, electrical systems, monitoring systems, and backup power. Failure of those systems can affect animal care, visitor access, property damage, and business income.

Do prior animal incidents affect wildlife attraction insurance?

Prior incidents can affect underwriting. Bites, scratches, escapes, visitor injuries, employee injuries, animal deaths, vehicle damage, or containment failures should be explained with loss runs, claim status, corrective action, and current procedures.

What is the fastest way to start a zoo or aquarium insurance review?

The fastest way is to complete the animal services intake form with details about species, visitor activities, property, equipment, systems, employees, vehicles, current policies, and claim history.

START THE REVIEW

Send the real operation details before anyone guesses at coverage or premium.

Tell us what animals are involved, how visitors interact with the attraction, what systems and property must be protected, what employees and vehicles are used, and whether there are prior claims, restrictions, non-renewals, or declinations.

Disclaimer: Coverage availability and eligibility may depend on many factors, including underwriting review, carrier guidelines, policy terms, state requirements, business operations, risk characteristics, and other information provided during the application or quoting process. Kelly Insurance Group cannot guarantee that every individual, customer, organization, or business seeking coverage will qualify for, receive, or successfully place insurance coverage. All policy coverages, exclusions, conditions, limits, endorsements, and terms should be carefully reviewed by the consumer, insured, or applicant to confirm that the coverage requested is the coverage being quoted, offered, or provided. Insurance coverage, policy changes, endorsements, cancellations, and other policy terms are not bound, changed, confirmed, or altered unless and until written confirmation is provided by a licensed Kelly Insurance Group team member, the applicable insurance carrier, or an authorized underwriter. This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not provide legal advice, legal opinions, insurance coverage opinions, or policy interpretations. Information on this page should not be relied upon as a substitute for reviewing the actual policy language or consulting appropriate professional advisors. Kelly Insurance Group does not employ, supervise, or direct attorneys.