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Business insurance for home-health agencies in Nevada
Published 2026-06-11 · by Brokly
What insurance do Nevada home-health agencies need?
Each requirement and definition below cites its statute, regulator, or public reference — full sources at the end of this section.
You're required to have
Covers medical care and part of lost wages when nurses, aides, and therapists get hurt on the job.
Required from the first employee — Nevada's industrial insurance law is compulsory for any employer with one or more employees under a contract of hire.
Pays for medical care to treat employees injured or made ill by their jobs and replaces part of their lost income. Home-health work concentrates the hazards OSHA flags for the trade: the most common injuries are sprains, strains, and other musculoskeletal injuries from lifting and moving patients — performed in homes where workers have little control over the work environment — and driving from client to client puts workers at high risk for car accidents. It also protects the agency from most lawsuits by injured employees. Lifting and moving patients in homes the agency doesn't control, then driving to the next one — home-health work carries an injury profile well above office healthcare's.
Typically covers
- Medical bills for a work injury, at rates the state sets
- Part of the injured employee's lost wages
- The employer too: covered employees generally can't sue over the injury
Typically doesn’t
- Injuries outside work
- Independent contractors, in most states
- Lawsuits that get around the can't-sue trade-off — that's the employer's liability part of the same policy
Source: Nevada Revised Statutes § 616B.633 (Nevada State Legislature)
Required in specific situations
Errors in care delivery become claims against the agency — and several states condition the home-health agency license itself on liability coverage.
Required if your state conditions the home-health agency license on liability coverage — several states do.
Professional liability — errors and omissions — covers losses from errors in judgment, breaches of duty, or negligent acts in the performance of services for others. For a home-health agency that is the clinical work itself — skilled nursing and therapy delivered in patients' homes — where a missed assessment, a medication error, or care that falls short of the plan becomes a claim against the agency. Several states make liability coverage a condition of the agency license itself, each framing its own requirement. The product is clinical judgment exercised in a patient's home — and in several states the agency license rides on showing liability coverage.
Typically covers
- Financial harm from advice, designs, or specs that turn out wrong
- Client claims that work failed inspection or missed a professional standard
- Legal defense for those claims — often the largest cost
Typically doesn’t
- Bodily injury or property damage — that's general liability
- Intentional wrongdoing
- Work redone purely as warranty or goodwill
Definition source: NAIC — Glossary of Insurance Terms (errors and omissions / professional liability)
Visiting care runs on cars — liability and property-damage protection for the vehicles that carry nurses and aides from client to client.
Nevada requires every registered motor vehicle to carry liability insurance with minimum limits of $25,000 for bodily injury or death of one person, $50,000 for bodily injury or death of two or more persons in any one crash, and $20,000 for property damage (NRS 485.185).
Required if the business puts owned or leased vehicles on public roads — nearly every state requires auto-liability coverage to operate them.
Commercial auto insurance includes liability and property-damage protection for cars, trucks, and vans used for business — for a home-health agency, the vehicles that carry nurses and aides between clients. Hired and non-owned auto (HNOA) coverage extends that liability protection to staff driving their own cars on agency visits. The drive between clients isn't downtime, either: under federal wage rules, travel from client to client during the workday is paid work time. The trade's defining motion is the drive to the next patient — staff vehicles strung between clients' homes, all day, every day.
Typically covers
- Liability when a business vehicle injures someone or damages property
- Accidents in vehicles titled to the business, driven by employees for work
- The liability minimums states set for business vehicles
Typically doesn’t
- Your liability when employees drive their own cars for work — that's hired and non-owned auto; the employee's own car stays on their personal policy
- The freight or goods being hauled — that's cargo or inland marine coverage
- Damage to your own vehicle, unless physical damage coverage is added
Source: Nevada Revised Statutes NRS 485.185 — Nevada Legislature
Worth a look for this trade
Working in clients' homes every day, injury or damage to others — and to their property — becomes a claim against the agency.
Protects the agency against claims of bodily injury or property damage to others. Home-health work happens inside clients' homes: a damaged floor, a broken fixture, a family member tripping over equipment — third-party claims arrive against the business whose staff were in the house. Care work also carries an exposure of its own: abuse-and-molestation coverage — insurance against claims of physical or sexual abuse — which Oregon's state risk-management office, for one, calls for in state contracts for services involving care of a client. The workplace is someone else's home — every visit is a premises the agency doesn't control, full of property it can be held answerable for.
Typically covers
- Injuries to customers, visitors, and other third parties
- Damage your operations cause to someone else's property
- Legal defense for covered claims
Typically doesn’t
- Your employees' injuries — that's workers' compensation
- Mistakes in professional advice or design — that's professional liability
- Redoing your own faulty workmanship itself
Definition source: Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial general liability insurance
Patient records travel into the field with every visit — and HIPAA's breach-notification duties travel with them.
Helps the agency absorb the losses that follow a compromise of its systems or patient data — costs like data repair, credit monitoring for affected individuals, business interruption, and litigation. Most commercial property and general liability policies do not cover cyber risk, so it is bought as its own, highly customized policy. For a home-health agency the exposure rides along on every visit: protected health information on the phones and tablets in the field, and the scheduling and visit-verification systems the day runs on — with HIPAA's Breach Notification Rule setting duties to notify affected individuals, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and, in larger breaches, the media. The patient chart leaves the office every morning — a trade run on field devices and scheduling systems carries its records, and its breach duties, wherever care happens.
Typically covers
- The fallout of a hack or data breach — notifying customers, restoring data and systems
- Claims from customers whose data was exposed
- Often the income lost while systems are down
Typically doesn’t
- Physical damage to property — that's commercial property
- Tricked-into-wiring-money losses on many forms — social-engineering coverage is its own add-on
- Breaches at your vendors, unless the policy extends to them
Definition source: HHS — HIPAA Breach Notification Rule (45 CFR §§164.400–414)
Exact terms live in the policy — these are the typical boundaries.
What does it all cost?
A typical <5-employee home-health agency in Nevada runs modeled $460–$1.8k/yr in workers’ comp. More benchmarks are on the way to this chart.
bar height = modeled annual cost · tap a bar for that size’s range
Modeled from the $0.55/$100 payroll filed rate (2024) and each band's own observed payroll (CBP 2023). Illustrative — not a quote.
| Size band | Workers’ comp, modeled $/yr |
|---|---|
| <5 employees | ≈$640 |
| 5–9 employees | ≈$1.5k |
| 10–19 employees | ≈$3.4k |
| 20–49 employees | ≈$7.2k |
| 50–99 employees | ≈$17k |
| 100–249 employees | ≈$36k |
How Nevada ranks + full workers’-comp detail →
Benchmarks in progress: Professional liability · Commercial auto · General liability · Cyber insurance
Sources & notes
Illustrative benchmark — not a quote or coverage recommendation. What a home-health agency actually needs depends on its operations, contracts, and carrier.
- Nevada Revised Statutes § 616B.633 (Nevada State Legislature) — as of NRS current through the 83rd (2025) Legislative Session (page rev. 4/15/2026)
- Texas Department of Insurance — Workers' compensation insurance guide — as of updated 2024-11-19
- OSHA — Home Healthcare (hazards)
- NAIC — Small Business Insurance
- NAIC — Glossary of Insurance Terms (errors and omissions / professional liability)
- Washington RCW 70.127.080 — in-home services agency license application (liability-insurance condition) — as of current RCW
- Florida Statutes §400.471(3) — home health agency licensure (malpractice and liability insurance) — as of 2025 Florida Statutes
- Nevada Revised Statutes NRS 485.185 — Nevada Legislature — as of Rev. 4/15/2026 (current through 2025 legislative session)
- NAIC — Auto Insurance topic — as of 2025-09-26
- Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial property insurance guide
- U.S. Department of Labor — Fact Sheet #79D: Hours Worked Applicable to Domestic Service Employment Under the FLSA
- Texas Department of Insurance — Commercial general liability insurance
- Oregon DAS Risk Management — Insurance Clauses: Physical Abuse and Sexual Molestation
- HHS — HIPAA Breach Notification Rule (45 CFR §§164.400–414)
- NAIC — Cybersecurity topic — as of last updated 2024-05-09
- Oregon DCBS workers' compensation premium rate ranking study, June 2025 (calendar-year 2024 rates) — as of calendar year 2024
- US Census County Business Patterns 2023, state file (Home health care services (NAICS 621610)) — as of 2023
Sources retrieved 2026-06-04 – 2026-06-11.
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