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
Yes — and the answer is more clear-cut than most PA students realize. The moment you step into a clinical rotation, you are performing patient care. You are taking histories, conducting physical exams, assisting in procedures, and making clinical decisions under preceptor supervision. Even in a supervised role, you carry personal liability for the care you provide.
Here is what every PA student needs to understand about clinical rotation liability:
The risk is not theoretical. PA students interact with patients in high-acuity settings — emergency departments, surgical suites, inpatient wards — where the potential for adverse outcomes exists regardless of how careful you are. Individual malpractice coverage ensures you have your own legal defense if a claim arises.
A quality PA student malpractice policy provides far more protection than most students expect. Here is what standard student coverage includes:
This is the core coverage. If a patient alleges that your clinical care during a supervised rotation caused harm — a missed finding on a physical exam, an error during a procedure you assisted with, a documentation mistake — your policy pays for legal defense and any resulting damages up to your coverage limits.
PA students handle protected health information (PHI) constantly during rotations. If you are accused of a HIPAA privacy violation — even an inadvertent one, such as discussing a patient case in a hallway where others can overhear — your student policy typically includes a sub-limit for legal defense costs related to privacy claims.
Yes, even students can face board complaints. If a complaint is filed with a state medical board or PA licensing board related to your conduct during clinical rotations, your policy provides coverage for legal defense during the investigation and hearing process. This is one of the most overlooked and most valuable benefits of individual coverage.
If you provide emergency care outside of your clinical rotation setting — helping at the scene of an accident, assisting a fellow student who collapses — Good Samaritan coverage protects you from claims arising from that off-duty care.
PA student malpractice coverage is among the most affordable professional liability insurance available:
| Provider | Approximate Annual Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| CM&F Group (AAPA partnership) | FREE | Occurrence-based, $1M/$3M limits; requires AAPA student membership |
| HPSO (student policy) | $35–$65/year | Student-specific policy with board defense included |
| Proliability (student) | $40–$75/year | Occurrence-based options available |
| Other carriers | $45–$85/year | Varies by carrier and coverage features |
Free Coverage Through AAPA
CM&F Group offers free malpractice insurance for PA students through its partnership with the American Academy of Physician Associates (AAPA). The policy provides occurrence-based coverage with $1M/$3M limits — the same limits most practicing PAs carry. All you need is an AAPA student membership. If you haven’t already, check with your PA program about AAPA student membership — most programs facilitate enrollment during orientation.
PA students face liability considerations that differ from medical students and nursing students in important ways. Understanding these distinctions helps you make better coverage decisions.
During clinical rotations, PA students work under the direct supervision of a preceptor — who may be a PA-C, a physician, or another qualified clinician depending on the rotation site. This preceptor relationship is different from the supervisory structures in other health professions. Your preceptor is responsible for overseeing your clinical activities, but their malpractice insurance does not automatically extend to cover you individually.
This is a critical point that many PA students overlook. Your preceptor carries their own individual or employer-provided malpractice policy. That policy covers the preceptor’s clinical activities. It does not cover the PA student working under their supervision unless the policy explicitly includes student coverage — and most individual policies do not. If a claim arises from your actions during a rotation, the preceptor’s insurer has no obligation to defend you.
Many clinical sites — particularly hospitals, surgical centers, and large health systems — require proof of individual malpractice coverage from every student before granting access. Without a certificate of insurance in your name, you may be barred from a rotation. This can delay your clinical progress and, in turn, your graduation date.
PA clinical rotations frequently include settings with elevated malpractice risk: surgical rotations where you may be assisting in the OR, emergency medicine rotations where rapid clinical decisions are made under pressure, and inpatient rotations involving acutely ill patients. These higher-acuity settings carry inherently greater liability exposure — making individual coverage even more important.
Many PA programs carry some form of institutional malpractice coverage. Some students assume this means they are personally protected. That assumption is dangerous. Here is how school policies and individual policies compare:
The gap that catches students: School policies typically end when you leave the program. If a patient files a claim months or years after you graduate — which is common in malpractice — the school’s policy may no longer cover the incident. With your own occurrence-based individual policy, you are covered for any incident that happened while the policy was active, regardless of when the claim is filed.
There is also a forward-looking benefit to carrying individual coverage as a student: it creates a claims history. When you transition to a professional policy after licensure, having a documented history of continuous coverage with no claims can help you qualify for better rates.
Mind the Gap at Graduation
One of the most common and most dangerous coverage mistakes PA students make is letting malpractice coverage lapse between graduation and starting their first PA-C position. Your student policy ends when you graduate. Your employer policy (if your first job provides one) does not begin until your start date. If a claim from your clinical rotations surfaces during this gap — or if you provide any clinical care during the gap period — you may have no coverage at all. Plan your transition before graduation day.
The transition from PA student to licensed PA-C is one of the highest-risk periods for coverage gaps. Here is how to handle it correctly:
For a detailed explanation of why employer coverage alone is insufficient, see our guide: Why Your Employer’s Malpractice Insurance Isn’t Enough.
Several reputable providers offer malpractice coverage specifically designed for PA students:
CM&F Group is the most widely used source of PA student malpractice insurance, primarily because student coverage is free through the AAPA partnership. The policy is occurrence-based with $1M/$3M limits — meaning incidents that occur during your coverage period are covered regardless of when a claim is eventually filed. This eliminates any need for tail coverage when your student policy ends. Requires AAPA student membership.
HPSO (Healthcare Providers Service Organization) offers student PA policies with competitive rates and board defense coverage. HPSO is backed by CNA, one of the largest malpractice carriers in the country. Student policies are available directly through their website.
When evaluating PA student malpractice policies, focus on these factors:
PA student malpractice insurance protects your career from day one of clinicals. Free coverage is available through AAPA, or compare affordable student policies from top carriers.
Yes. Most PA programs require proof of individual malpractice coverage before clinical rotations begin. Even if your program carries a blanket policy, that coverage protects the institution — not you personally. PA students are held to the standard of care of a PA, not a student, so individual coverage is essential. Free coverage is available through the CM&F/AAPA partnership.
It can be. CM&F Group offers free student malpractice coverage through its partnership with the AAPA (American Academy of Physician Associates). This is an occurrence-based policy with $1M/$3M limits — the same limits most practicing PAs carry. All you need is an AAPA student membership. Other providers like HPSO offer student policies in the $35–$85/year range if you prefer an alternative carrier.
Generally no. Your preceptor’s individual malpractice policy covers their own clinical activities. It does not automatically extend to PA students working under their supervision. Clinical rotation sites may carry facility coverage, but this protects the site — not you individually. Always carry your own policy to ensure you have dedicated legal representation if a claim arises.
Your student policy ends at graduation. You need to transition to a professional PA malpractice policy before your first day of clinical practice as a licensed PA-C. Do not let coverage lapse between graduation and starting work. If your student policy was occurrence-based (like the free CM&F/AAPA policy), past incidents remain covered. Many carriers offer significant new graduate discounts — CM&F provides 10% AAPA member credit plus 10% risk management credit.