The Four Seasons of Small Business Risk
Winter: Property Damage and Slip-and-Fall Liability
Winter is expensive for small businesses. Water and freezing damage is the number-one small business property claim, according to The Hartford’s 2025 data. Burst pipes, ice dams, and frozen sprinkler systems can cause tens of thousands of dollars in damage overnight.
The liability side is just as significant. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that slips, trips, and falls account for 19.9% of all workplace injuries. Snow and ice turn sidewalks, parking lots, and entryways into prime slip-and-fall territory, driving up general liability exposure for any business with a physical location.
For your clients, winter is when property and General Liability (GL) coverage get stress-tested simultaneously. If either one is thin, the season will expose it.
Spring: Water Intrusion and Hail
Spring brings its own set of problems, especially in regions where snowmelt and heavy rains overlap. Flooding from snowmelt can damage ground-floor inventory, electrical systems, and flooring. Hail storms threaten roofs, outdoor signage, and any equipment stored outside.
Foot traffic also starts picking up in spring for retail and service businesses. That seasonal risk means GL exposure could begins to climb again . Agents should use spring as a checkpoint to confirm that property limits reflect any improvements or new equipment added over the winter.
Summer: Heat, Outdoor Operations, and Peak Revenue
Seasonal risks for small businesses in the summer can catch owners off guard. HVAC failures spike during heat waves, and a single commercial unit replacement can run $8,000 or more. Restaurants, fitness studios, and retail shops that depend on climate control can lose revenue each day their system is down.
Outdoor operations create additional liability exposure. Restaurants with patios, job sites that expose workers to heat-illness and event-based businesses, all face higher bodily injury and property damage risk during summer months.
Summer is also peak revenue season for many small businesses, which means a single covered event can trigger larger Business Owner Policy (BOP) claims. Property and GL limits that were adequate in January may fall short when monthly revenue doubles.
Fall and the Holiday Rush: Inventory, Foot Traffic, and Seasonal Workers
The fourth quarter is when multiple risk factors converge. Inventory values hit their highest point of the year as businesses stock up for holiday sales. A fire, burst pipe, or theft event in November can wipe out inventory that represents a business owner’s largest capital outlay of the year.
Foot traffic reaches its annual peak, which directly increases slip-and-fall and general liability exposure. Seasonal hiring adds another layer of risk: rushed onboarding, less-experienced staff, and higher error rates on customer-facing work all raise the likelihood of professional liability claims.
For service-based businesses like consultants, accountants, and IT providers, the holiday crunch can lead to mistakes. Missed deadlines, incorrect deliverables, and communication breakdowns become more common when teams are stretched thin.
