Cyber Insurance Risk Estimator
Estimate data breach costs and identify insurance coverage gaps. Enter values for instant results with step-by-step formulas.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Healthcare Breach
Problem: 100k Records, Healthcare. Limit $1M.
Solution: Cost ~ $18M (High regulatory fines). Gap: -$17M.
Result: Massive Gap
Example 2: Retail Breach
Problem: 10k Records, Retail. Limit $2M.
Solution: Cost ~ $1.2M. Gap: None.
Result: Fully Covered
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Cyber Insurance cover?
Typically covers First-Party costs (Forensics, Data Recovery, Ransom payments, Business Interruption) and Third-Party costs (Legal defense, Settlements, Fines).
Does insurance cover Ransomware?
Usually, but sub-limits often apply. You might have a $5M policy but only a $500k sub-limit for Extortion payments.
What is 'Silent Cyber'?
Potential cyber coverage within traditional property/liability policies that doesn't explicitly exclude cyber events. Insurers are closing these loopholes.
How are insurance premiums calculated?
Insurance premiums are based on risk assessment using actuarial data. Key factors include age, health status, location, coverage amount, deductible level, and claims history. Higher risk means higher premiums. Choosing a higher deductible typically lowers your premium because you assume more out-of-pocket risk.
What are the main types of insurance coverage?
Major types include health insurance (medical costs), auto insurance (liability, collision, comprehensive), homeowners/renters (property and liability), life insurance (term or whole life), disability insurance (income replacement), and umbrella insurance (excess liability). Each has specific coverage limits, exclusions, and deductibles.
What is the difference between term and whole life insurance?
Term life insurance covers a specific period (10-30 years) and pays a death benefit if you die during the term. Premiums are lower but there is no cash value. Whole life insurance covers your entire life, includes a cash value component that grows tax-deferred, but premiums are 5-15 times higher than term for the same coverage.