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Protecting yourself from medical malpractice claims starts with understanding the two most common types of medical professional liability insurance (medical malpractice insurance): claims-made and occurrence.
The differences between these policies can determine whether you may be covered when a claim is filed, which could be months or years after the incident in question.
Here is what you need to know about how each policy type works, where coverage gaps can appear, and how tail insurance fits in. Tail coverage is an extension of a claims-made policy that allows a physician to report claims after the policy has ended, for incidents that occurred while the policy was active. It is commonly purchased when a physician changes jobs, switches insurers, or retires.
A claims-made policy covers incidents when the incident occurs on or after the retroactive date and the claim is filed while the policy is still in force.
Two conditions must be met for coverage to apply:
Claims-made policies are the most common type of coverage offered by employers to physicians who work for a hospital or health system.
These are common phrases that you’ll hear when discussing medical malpractice (or “med mal” in industry shorthand) with your insurance advisor.
Dr. Chen recently completed her residency, during which time she was covered under a claims-made policy from 2020 to 2025. In 2026, she started a fellowship at a new institution with coverage under a new policy.
Recently, a patient filed a malpractice claim for treatment Dr. Chen provided in 2025 during her final year of residency. Because the claims-made policy from her residency is no longer active, the claim is not covered. Without tail coverage in place, Dr. Chen may have no coverage for claims arising from incidents during that period.
An occurrence-based policy covers any incident that happens during the active policy period, regardless of when the claim is filed.
Occurrence policies offer the advantage of not requiring tail coverage; however, some carriers do not offer occurrence-based policies, and availability may vary by specialty or state.
Dr. Reyes had an occurrence-based malpractice policy from January 2022 through December 2025. The policy ended when she moved to a new practice in 2026.
In 2027, a patient filed a claim for a procedure Dr. Reyes performed in 2024. The incident occurred during the policy period, so it is still covered. No tail coverage is needed.
To learn more about malpractice insurance costs, see “A Closer Look at Medical Malpractice Premiums.”
Most employer-provided malpractice policies are claims-made. If you are employed by a hospital, health system, or large group practice, there is a good chance your coverage is claims-made.
For physicians on claims-made policies, understanding your retroactive date, knowing what creates a coverage gap, and having a plan for tail coverage when transitions happen are the most important things to stay on top of.
Occurrence policies are more common in small private practices, locum tenens arrangements, and certain specialty settings.
Physicians working as independent contractors or in locum tenens arrangements should confirm that coverage applies across all practice locations and is not limited to just one.
For more information, listen to an interview with Chris Albano, National Account Manager at AMA Insurance, where he shares strategies for navigating the complexities of medical malpractice insurance.
For a related look at common mistakes physicians make navigating these decisions, see Avoid These Five Costly Malpractice Insurance Mistakes.
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