Business in New Orleans moves through krewes, chambers and neighborhood circles—coffee at Zony Mash or a po-boy on Magazine can accomplish more than a boardroom...
Real incidents from 2024-2025 that cost New Orleans businesses millions.
On Sept. 11–12, 2024, Hurricane Francine came ashore in Terrebonne Parish and pushed a flash-flood emergency into New Orleans and Jefferson Parish...
Jan. 21–23 brought a historic winter event to New Orleans—snow on Uptown lawns, icy bridges and a multi-day freeze that stressed older buildings...
On Sept. 11–12, 2024, Hurricane Francine came ashore in Terrebonne Parish and pushed a flash-flood emergency into New Orleans and Jefferson Parish...
Jan. 21–23 brought a historic winter event to New Orleans—snow on Uptown lawns, icy bridges and a multi-day freeze that stressed older buildings...
Don't Learn These Lessons the Hard Way
Get coverage that actually covers New Orleans's real risks.
What your business faces each season and the coverage that actually protects you.
March - May
Thunderstorms train along I-10 and pop street flooding; neutral-ground parking advisories and quick pump checks are routine. Festival load-ins share curb space with cones and police barricades—plan dock times before lunch.
Must Have:
Property coverage with storm damage protection
Must Have:
Equipment breakdown + business interruption
June - August
Heat and afternoon downpours rule. Power blips test refrigeration and POS; watch for boil-water orders after main breaks. Hurricane season requires COIs, roof checks, ice and generator drills.
September - November
Peak tropics meet football weeks. Tidal pushes can slow drainage in the Quarter and Bywater. Portable cooling and backup power keep patios and events moving.
Must Have:
Comprehensive property + business interruption
Must Have:
Property coverage including freeze damage
December - February
Mostly mild—until it isn’t. Blue-norther freezes can burst pipes and glaze bridges. Keep heat on in vacant suites, insulate risers, and log checks for claims.
Specialized coverage for the businesses that power New Orleans.
From the Quarter and CBD to Uptown music rooms, visitor cycles and festivals drive payrolls. Street closures, heat, and occasional boil-water orders reshape service windows and staffing.
Port NOLA, warehouses and the Public Belt rail connect river cargo to I-10. Weather, labor calendars and river conditions can idle gates and reroute drays.
Ochsner, LCMC and campus clinics anchor jobs across Uptown, Mid-City and New Orleans East. Downtime risk and water quality are front-of-mind.
Roasters, breweries and commissaries cluster in the Bywater, Treme and Warehouse District, serving hotels and festivals.
Historic rehabs and storm repairs are constant, from Uptown doubles to riverfront warehouses.
From the Quarter and CBD to Uptown music rooms, visitor cycles and festivals drive payrolls. Street closures, heat, and occasional boil-water orders reshape service windows and staffing.
Port NOLA, warehouses and the Public Belt rail connect river cargo to I-10. Weather, labor calendars and river conditions can idle gates and reroute drays.
We're not just insurance agents – we're New Orleans business protection experts.
We know New Orleans's unique risks and business environment. Local knowledge that matters.
Fast quotes, quick claims support. When New Orleans businesses need coverage, we're here.
Coverage that actually pays claims. No hidden exclusions, just real protection.
No hidden fees, no surprises. Clear pricing and honest guidance you can trust.
Questions about coverage? Claims support? We're here when New Orleans businesses need us.
Your success is our priority. We stand behind our coverage recommendations 100%.
Usually no unless you have Off-Premises Power/Service-Interruption coverage or on-premises physical damage. Consider adding spoilage and equipment breakdown, and keep temperature/outage logs.
Property forms rarely cover lost revenue from a boil order without physical damage. Spoilage/contamination and service-interruption endorsements can help with stock loss and extra sanitation expense.
Named-storm deductibles are often 2–5% of insured value per building/location. Review how it applies and coordinate with lender requirements; consider higher wind-driven rain sublimits for older roofs.
Surface water is Flood (separate policy). Water/sewer backup is a property endorsement with sublimits. Many claims involve both—carry both coverages and elevate critical stock.
Crowd flows shift to sidewalks and alleys. Verify GL limits, AI/waiver wording for promoters, and consider Assault & Battery buybacks for nightlife venues.
Usually no unless you have Off-Premises Power/Service-Interruption coverage or on-premises physical damage. Consider adding spoilage and equipment breakdown, and keep temperature/outage logs.
Property forms rarely cover lost revenue from a boil order without physical damage. Spoilage/contamination and service-interruption endorsements can help with stock loss and extra sanitation expense.
Named-storm deductibles are often 2–5% of insured value per building/location. Review how it applies and coordinate with lender requirements; consider higher wind-driven rain sublimits for older roofs.
Spoilage, off-prem power, and wind-driven rain tuned to Orleans ParishJoin thousands of New Orleans businesses already protected.
Join the thousands of New Orleans businesses who chose protection over hope.