What Is PA Malpractice Insurance?
Understand what professional liability insurance covers for physician assistants, what it doesn’t, and why PAs need their own individual policy — even…
Key Takeaways
Every malpractice insurance policy for physician assistants falls into one of two structural categories: claims-made or occurrence. This distinction determines one critical thing — whether you remain protected for past patient encounters after your policy ends.
Understanding this difference is not optional. It is the single most consequential decision in your PA malpractice coverage, affecting your financial exposure for years or even decades after you stop practicing.
This matters because malpractice claims move slowly. The average time from clinical incident to formal claim filing is 16 to 24 months. For surgical PAs, the window can extend longer. For PAs who treat pediatric patients, the exposure period can stretch years, as minors in many states can file claims until they reach adulthood plus a statute of limitations period.
Claims-made is the more complex of the two policy structures, and it is the type most PAs encounter first — because most employer-sponsored group policies use it.
Claims-made policies start with significantly lower premiums than occurrence policies. This is because, in year one, the insurer’s exposure is limited: only incidents from that first year can generate claims, and there has not been enough time for most claims to develop.
Each subsequent year, the insurer’s exposure grows — more past patient encounters, more potential claims. To reflect this increasing risk, your premium increases annually over a 4-to-5-year period until it reaches what insurers call the “mature” rate. At maturity, your claims-made premium will be roughly comparable to (and sometimes higher than) an equivalent occurrence premium.
Every claims-made policy has a retroactive date — the earliest date from which prior incidents are covered. Incidents before this date are excluded, even if the claim is filed during the active policy period.
When you first purchase a claims-made policy, your retroactive date is typically your policy start date. If you switch carriers but maintain a claims-made policy, the new carrier may agree to “pick up” your original retroactive date, providing continuous coverage for past incidents. If they do not, you face a gap.
PA-Specific Risk: Supervising Physician Changes
When your supervising physician changes — whether they leave the practice, retire, or you move to a new supervisory agreement — verify that your claims-made policy’s retroactive date and coverage continuity are unaffected. If you were covered under your supervisor’s group policy, their departure may create a gap in your coverage for incidents that occurred during their supervision. Get written confirmation from the insurer that your coverage continues without interruption.
The defining feature of claims-made coverage: a claim must be reported while your policy is in force. If your policy lapses, is canceled, or ends when you leave a job, and a claim arrives after that — you are uninsured for that claim, even if the underlying incident happened while you were covered.
This creates a structural problem every time a PA changes jobs, retires, takes a leave of absence, or loses employment. The solution is tail coverage, which we cover in detail below.
If your employer provides malpractice coverage, it is almost certainly a claims-made policy. Insurers prefer this structure for group policies because it limits exposure and keeps initial group premiums competitive. The trade-off is transferred to you: when you leave, you inherit the tail coverage problem.
Occurrence coverage is structurally simpler and, for most individual PAs, more protective over the course of a career.
Occurrence premiums are higher from day one — typically 15-25% more than a comparable first-year claims-made premium. However, occurrence premiums remain relatively flat over time, because the insurer prices in the full long-tail risk upfront.
This means you pay more in year one, but you avoid the year-over-year premium escalation of claims-made policies. And critically, you never pay for tail coverage.
This is the most significant advantage of occurrence coverage. When your policy period ends — whether you change jobs, retire, take a sabbatical, or switch careers entirely — every incident that happened during that policy period remains covered forever. No additional purchase required.
For PAs who change jobs frequently, work locum tenens assignments, or plan to retire in the foreseeable future, this eliminates one of the most expensive and stressful aspects of malpractice insurance management.
PA-Specific: Surgical Specialties and Long Discovery Periods
PAs working in surgical specialties face particularly long claim discovery periods. A surgical complication may not become apparent for months or years after the procedure. Occurrence coverage is especially valuable in these settings because it protects you for the incident date, not the claim date. If you assist in a surgery in 2025 and a related claim emerges in 2029, your 2025 occurrence policy still covers you — no tail required.
| Feature | Claims-Made | Occurrence |
|---|---|---|
| Coverage trigger | Claim reported during active policy | Incident occurred during policy period |
| Initial premiums | Lower (50-75% of occurrence in year 1) | Higher from day one |
| Premium trajectory | Increases annually for 4-5 years to mature rate | Relatively flat year to year |
| Tail coverage required? | Yes — when you leave, retire, or cancel | No — never |
| Tail cost for PAs | $3,000-$6,000 typical (1.5-2x annual premium) | N/A |
| Retroactive date | Yes — must track and maintain | No — not applicable |
| Coverage after policy ends | None without tail | Permanent for policy-period incidents |
| Best for | Budget-constrained early career; employer-provided | Long-term individual coverage; frequent job changes |
| Supervisor change impact | May create coverage gaps | No impact |
Tail coverage — formally called an Extended Reporting Period (ERP) — is the reason the claims-made vs. occurrence decision matters so much financially. It is the hidden cost that turns a seemingly cheaper claims-made policy into an expensive one.
Tail coverage is priced as a multiple of your expiring annual premium:
For most PAs, whose mature annual claims-made premium falls in the $1,500-$3,000 range, a permanent tail costs $3,000-$6,000. This is a lump-sum payment due when your policy terminates — precisely when you may be between jobs, starting a new position, or retiring.
This is one of the most consequential details in your employment contract — and one of the most commonly overlooked. The time to negotiate tail coverage responsibility is before you accept the position, not when you resign.
Ask these questions during the offer stage:
Get the answers in writing. Verbal promises about tail coverage are not enforceable. Many PAs discover during their exit that the tail policy they were promised was never formalized.
When switching from one claims-made carrier to another, you have an alternative to buying tail from the old carrier: nose coverage (also called Prior Acts coverage) from the new carrier.
Instead of purchasing tail from Carrier A, you ask Carrier B to set your retroactive date back to when your Carrier A coverage began. This effectively covers the same prior incidents — from the new policy side. Nose coverage is often less expensive than tail and can simplify the transition. Ask your broker to compare both options when switching carriers.
Tip: Nose vs. Tail Cost Comparison
Always get quotes for both tail coverage from your departing carrier and nose (prior acts) coverage from your new carrier. The price difference can be significant. Your insurance broker should run both scenarios automatically — if they do not, ask them to.
Physician assistants face several unique coverage dynamics that general malpractice guides do not address. These PA-specific factors should weigh heavily in your claims-made vs. occurrence decision.
PAs in surgical specialties — orthopedics, general surgery, neurosurgery, cardiothoracic — routinely assist in procedures where complications may not manifest for months or years. A surgical site infection that leads to chronic complications, a hardware failure discovered 18 months post-op, or nerve damage that develops gradually all create extended exposure windows.
Occurrence coverage is particularly valuable here. The incident date, not the claim date, determines coverage. Under a claims-made policy, you would need continuous coverage (or tail) stretching potentially years after the procedure to be protected.
PAs who work locum tenens (temporary) assignments face a unique challenge: gaps between assignments. If you have a claims-made policy that lapses between assignments, every patient you treated during the previous assignment is unprotected for claims filed during the gap.
Occurrence coverage eliminates this problem entirely. Each assignment period is permanently covered regardless of whether you have active insurance between assignments. For locum tenens PAs, occurrence is not just preferable — it is nearly essential.
PAs who practice under supervisory or collaborative agreements face a risk that is unique to the PA profession. When your supervising physician changes — whether they leave the practice, retire, or you transition to a new supervisory relationship — your claims-made coverage may be affected.
If you were covered under your supervisor’s group claims-made policy, their departure can create a gap for incidents that occurred during their supervision period. The new supervisor’s policy may not pick up prior acts coverage for incidents under the previous arrangement.
An individual occurrence policy you own independently eliminates this risk entirely. It follows you, not your supervisor.
Critical: Supervisory Relationship Changes Create Claims-Made Risk
When a supervisory relationship ends — whether through the physician’s departure, your transfer, or a practice restructuring — immediately verify in writing that your claims-made coverage is continuous and uninterrupted. If you cannot get that confirmation, consider purchasing tail or switching to an individual occurrence policy before the transition occurs.
PAs in Optimal Team Practice (OTP) states — where PAs can practice with greater autonomy under collaborative agreements rather than direct supervision — carry greater individual liability exposure. With increased autonomy comes increased accountability, and occurrence coverage provides a stronger safety net for PAs operating with expanded scope.
PAs commonly move between practice settings: hospital to outpatient clinic, primary care to urgent care, private practice to academic medicine. Each transition under a claims-made policy creates a coverage transition event. Occurrence coverage provides continuity that transcends any single practice setting.
Use this framework to match your career situation to the right policy type:
| Your Situation | Recommended Policy Type | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Buying your own individual policy | Occurrence | Best long-term value; no tail; simplest management |
| Early career, tight budget | Claims-made (with plan to switch) | Lower initial cost; budget for tail or plan to switch later |
| Employer provides group coverage only | Add individual occurrence | Accept employer coverage but supplement with your own occurrence policy |
| You change jobs frequently | Occurrence | Avoids repeated tail purchases and gap risks |
| Locum tenens / temporary work | Occurrence | Eliminates gaps between assignments |
| Surgical specialty PA | Occurrence | Long claim discovery periods demand permanent coverage |
| Planning to retire within 5 years | Occurrence | No tail needed at retirement; immediate peace of mind |
| OTP-state PA with expanded autonomy | Occurrence | Greater individual liability exposure warrants strongest protection |
| Claims-made is your only option | Claims-made (but budget for tail) | Some coverage is always better than none; plan for exit costs |
Bottom Line: If you have the choice, occurrence coverage is almost always the better long-term value for PAs. The slightly higher annual premium eliminates tail coverage costs, gap risks, and the complexity of tracking retroactive dates across career transitions.
Individual malpractice insurance built for physician assistants — occurrence and claims-made options available, with board defense, consent-to-settle, and coverage that follows you across practice settings. Compare options in under 5 minutes.
Yes, but you will need tail coverage (or nose coverage from the new carrier) to close the gap on your old claims-made policy. Any incidents that occurred during your claims-made coverage period remain exposed until a claim is filed. Purchasing tail from the old carrier or negotiating prior-acts (nose) coverage from the new carrier ensures continuous protection. Many PAs make this switch when changing jobs or transitioning from employer group coverage to individual policies.
Your supervising physician’s policy covers them — not you. While employer or practice group policies may include you as an additional insured, those policies are designed to protect the entity and the supervising physician first. If your interests diverge in a lawsuit (which happens frequently), the insurer-appointed attorney represents the policyholder’s interest, not yours. Individual PA coverage ensures you have dedicated legal representation and protection for board complaints, side work, and career transitions.
If you are covered under your supervising physician’s claims-made group policy, a change in supervision can create a gap. The departing physician’s policy may not cover claims filed after their departure for incidents during their supervision period. You should verify in writing that your coverage continues without interruption when supervisory relationships change. This is one of the strongest arguments for maintaining your own individual PA malpractice policy — it follows you regardless of who supervises you.