INSURANCE GUIDE
Sports Club and Event Insurance UK
Public liability, employers liability, and event cancellation cover for UK sports clubs and event organisers.
TL;DR
- Sports clubs need public liability cover for injuries to spectators and third parties - member-to-member injuries may need separate personal accident or sports liability cover.
- Affiliated clubs often receive basic cover through their national governing body, but limits may be insufficient.
- Event organisers need public liability, employers liability, and usually event cancellation cover.
- Venue hire agreements frequently require the hirer to hold a minimum level of public liability cover.
Public Liability for Sports Clubs
Public liability insurance covers a sports club if a spectator, visitor, or member of the public is injured or has their property damaged as a result of the club's activities. It does not automatically cover injuries to players or members during play - that requires personal accident cover or, in some sports, specific sports liability insurance that extends to member-to-member incidents.
Typical scenarios covered: a spectator injured by a ball hit into the stand; a visitor slipping on a wet path to the clubhouse; a fire at the clubhouse spreading to neighbouring property. Cover limits of £2m to £5m are common; some venues and local authority facilities require £5m or £10m as a condition of hiring the ground.
National Governing Body Cover
Many sports clubs affiliated to a national governing body (NGB) receive a baseline level of public liability cover as part of their affiliation fee. The Football Association, the Rugby Football Union, England Cricket, and similar bodies arrange block cover for affiliated clubs. However, NGB cover limits vary and may not be sufficient for clubs with significant assets, large memberships, or commercial activities such as bar operations or function hire. Clubs should review the NGB cover limit and consider supplementing it with a standalone policy.
Employers Liability for Sports Clubs
Sports clubs that employ any paid staff - including part-time groundspeople, bar staff, administrators, or coaches - must hold employers liability insurance of at least £5m. Volunteer-only clubs with no paid staff are generally exempt from the statutory requirement, but clubs with a mix of volunteers and paid workers must hold the cover for the employed staff. This is a legal requirement under the Employers' Liability (Compulsory Insurance) Act 1969.
Event Insurance for Sports Events
Organisations putting on sports events - charity runs, tournaments, sports days, outdoor fitness events - need event-specific insurance that covers: public liability for the event; event cancellation and abandonment (covering irrecoverable costs if the event cannot proceed); equipment cover; and sometimes personal accident cover for participants. The cover needed depends on the size, nature, and commercial structure of the event.
Personal Accident Insurance for Members
Personal accident insurance pays a lump sum or weekly benefit to club members who are injured during club activities. It is separate from public liability and covers the member themselves rather than a third party. Some sports have a high injury frequency - contact sports, motor sports, winter sports - and clubs may choose to include personal accident cover as a member benefit or require members to hold their own cover.
Disclaimer
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute financial or insurance advice. Kaeltripton.com is not regulated by the FCA. Always read policy documents in full before purchasing cover.
Sources
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a voluntary sports club need public liability insurance?
There is no statutory requirement, but most venue hire agreements, local authority ground leases, and facility hire contracts require the hiring organisation to hold a minimum level of public liability cover. National governing bodies often mandate cover for affiliated clubs. In practice, almost all active sports clubs need public liability insurance to access venues and facilities.
Are sports club volunteers covered by the club's insurance?
Volunteers are generally covered as third parties under a club's public liability policy if they injure a non-member. However, injuries to the volunteers themselves are typically not covered by public liability insurance - personal accident cover or a voluntary workers extension is needed to protect volunteers who are injured while helping the club.
How much public liability cover does a sports club need?
Most sports clubs need a minimum of £2m to £5m of public liability cover. Clubs hiring local authority facilities, school grounds, or professional venues typically face minimum requirements of £5m or £10m. Clubs with large spectator events or commercial activities (bars, functions) should consider higher limits.