A new commercial insurance product from SafeHerb, a division of Specialty Program Group, provides a full suite of insurance protection for the cannabis and hemp industries.
SafeHerb’s Cannabis & Hemp Insurance offers “seed to sale” coverage, in-house loss control services and claims are handled by Avant Specialty Claims.
Kramer Hendricks, CIC, director of SafeHerb, said the product offers plant-touching businesses a full package policy including property and liability.
The SafeHerb coverage includes:
- General liability
- Product liability
- Property
- Equipment breakdown
- Indoor crop loss or damage
- Cargo
The SafeHerb products cover both cannabis and hemp businesses from cultivation to distribution.
Coverage is available to:
- Cultivators – Indoor, outdoor, and greenhouse
- Processors – Harvest, process, quarantine and test
- Manufacturers – Product development and manufacturing
- Wholesalers – Selling to retailers and distributors
- Transporters – Services with approved classification
- Dispensaries – Retail operations
- Laboratories – Stand-alone or large-scale operation
- Property Owners – Lease, sublease, and property exposure.
The coverage is underwritten by .
The coverage comes at a time when the cannabis and hemp industries are experiencing dramatic growth. Thirty-six states plus Washington D.C. have medical marijuana laws and 15 states plus Washington D.C. have recreational marijuana laws.
SafeHerb coverage is available in all through the company’s exclusive network of agents.
, provides property casualty protection for those involved from seed to sale in the cannabis and hemp industries.
Headquartered in Summit, NJ, SPG focuses on expanding program underwriting and specialty businesses.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Space Startups Seek Insurance for Orbital AI Data Centers
US P/C Rebounds to Post Q1 Underwriting Gain; Net Income Doubles
Flood Insurance Gap Will Squeeze Local Governments and Homeowners, Moody’s Says
DeSantis Signs Citizens Commercial Clearinghouse Bill That’s Been Called ‘Unneeded’ 

