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Physical Therapy Session

Oregon Physical Therapy Clinic Liability & Malpractice Insurance

See your price now-instant, selfserve quotes designed for Oregon PT clinics. Choose limits, add endorsements, and bind when ready.

Instant online quotes for Oregon PT clinic liability & malpractice insurance. Many clinics save up to 40% with CarePro Insurance.

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Professional Liability (Malpractice) for PT Clinics in Oregon

Oregon clinics operate across distinct metro and suburban footprints. Align coverage to patient volume, supervision of PTAs, and documentation practices so your policy mirrors real risk.

Instant online quotes for Oregon PT clinics-no phone call required.

Malpractice (professional liability) + General Liability with optional Property & Cyber.

Flexible limits and COIs to satisfy credentialing and lease terms.

Standardize consent, intake, and incident reporting to reduce claim friction.

How much does Physical Therapy Insurance cost in

Oregon

$1,822
- 5 Physical Therapists
$2,970
- 10 Physical Therapists
Average Pricing for $1M/$3M Coverage Limits:
(estimates only, quote your clinic in our portal for exact pricing)
$1,098
- 2 Physical Therapists
$2,198
- 5 Physical Therapists
$3,573
- 10 Physical Therapists
Average Pricing for $2M/$4M Coverage Limits:
(estimates only, quote your clinic in our portal for exact pricing)
$1,334
- 2 Physical Therapists
Physical Therapy Insurance cost varies depending on:
 

* Scope of services provided  
* Claims-made vs. occurrence form  
* Policy limits (standard limits are $1/$3M, but $100k/$300k, $250k/$500k, $500k/$1M and $2M/$4M limits available
* Prior claims history

 

**Note:** Rates will be underwritten for your exact situation.

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Oregon

Physical Therapy Specific Info

Oregon supports a diverse PT market with varied payer mixes and growth corridors in major metros.

Follow Oregon board guidance on direct access, referrals, and documentation standards. Oregon clinics should carry both.

Oregon clinics should carry both. General liability addresses premises and operations claims such as slip and fall.

Maintain compliant disclosures, referral documentation, and recordkeeping as applicable.

Shoulder Treatment

Oregon

Physical Therapy Frequently Asked Questions

Do physical therapy clinics need both general liability and professional liability-what's the difference for PT?

Oregon clinics should carry both. General liability addresses premises and operations claims such as slip and fall. Professional liability also called malpractice responds to allegations tied to clinical judgment, documentation, and treatment plans. Carriers often package GL and PL on one form for outpatient PT but they are distinct insuring agreements. State scope rules matter for what is considered professional services. In Oregon, see OAR 848-040-0180 recognizes telehealth for PT with same standard of care as in person for practice standards.

Typical outpatient PT pricing in Oregon for a solo PT runs from about 600 to 1600 dollars annually for a 1M per claim 3M aggregate limit. A small clinic entity policy commonly ranges from 1200 to 3500 dollars depending on revenue, number of providers, claims history, and higher risk services like manipulation or dry needling. Adding cyber, EPLI, or an umbrella increases the spend. Underwriting also considers state scope and direct access rules such as ORS 688.132 allows practice without referral and requires referral when clinical findings warrant.

How much does PT clinic malpractice insurance cost in Oregon (per provider and per clinic)?

Claims-made vs. occurrence for PT malpractice-what's best for a small outpatient clinic and why?

Occurrence locks coverage to the date of treatment and is simpler to live with but costs more in early years. Claims made costs less up front but you must keep prior acts and buy an extended reporting period tail if you close or switch carriers. For small outpatient clinics in Oregon, claims made is common and economical if you manage prior acts and tail terms in writing. Use carrier issued incident reporting language to preserve rights under claims made forms.

Are dry needling, spinal manipulation, and BFR covered-or excluded-on typical PT policies in Oregon?

In Oregon, spinal manipulation by PTs is restricted to within PT scope and training. Dry needling is transitioning. HB 3824 was signed in August 2025 authorizing the Board to regulate dry needling with an operative date of July 1, 2027. Until Board rules take effect, most carriers treat PT dry needling in Oregon as excluded or require specific endorsement and training proof. Blood flow restriction is usually covered when performed per manufacturer protocols as a PT modality, but you should disclose it on the application. Always align services with ORS 688.132 allows practice without referral and requires referral when clinical findings warrant and Board rules to avoid a professional services exclusion.

Does PT insurance cover telehealth and treating across state lines-what are the pitfalls in Oregon?

Most PT malpractice policies in Oregon extend to telehealth if the service is within your scope and you are licensed or have Compact privilege in the state where the patient sits. OAR 848-040-0180 recognizes telehealth for PT with same standard of care as in person and ORS 688.240 implements the Physical Therapy Licensure Compact and recognizes that practice occurs where the patient is located are the touchstones. Document informed consent, patient location, and technology failures in each note. Do not treat across state lines without that states license or Compact privilege, and be sure your cyber policy covers video platform incidents.

What policy limits do PT clinics usually carry in Oregon-is $1M/$3M enough or should we go higher?

For outpatient PT in Oregon, 1M per claim and 3M aggregate remains the market standard. Consider 2M per claim if you have multiple locations, pediatrics, cash based high volume, or hospital contracts requiring higher limits. Umbrella limits of 1M to 2M are common when contracts demand higher limits. Align limits with contracts and the statutes noted above for scope and supervision.

If you use independent contractors or mobile therapists in Oregon, carry malpractice for each clinician, general liability for premises and operations, workers compensation if state law requires, and hired and non owned auto for business use of personal vehicles. Verify each 1099 therapist has equal or better malpractice and list your clinic as additional insured where possible. Workers compensation triggers are state specific, see ORS 656.017 requires employers with subject workers to maintain workers compensation coverage for thresholds and penalties.

What insurance do we need if we use 1099 therapists, PRN, or mobile PT (HNOA, WC, GL/PL)?

Many PT malpractice forms include license board defense with sublimits such as 25k to 100k and HIPAA breach response with modest sublimits. True cyber losses like ransomware, system restoration, and data extortion are better placed on a separate cyber policy with first party and third party coverage. Select a form that includes regulatory defense and audit response and confirm defense is outside the liability limit.

Does PT malpractice include license/board defense, HIPAA breach response, and cyber/ransomware-or do we need a separate cyber policy?

What insurance do I need to start a PT clinic (or add a second location)-BOP, GL/PL, WC, Cyber, EPLI, Umbrella?

Many PT malpractice forms include license board defense with sublimits such as 25k to 100k and HIPAA breach response with modest sublimits. True cyber losses like ransomware, system restoration, and data extortion are better placed on a separate cyber policy with first party and third party coverage. Select a form that includes regulatory defense and audit response and confirm defense is outside the liability limit.

On claims made policies, ask for prior acts back to your first continuous date and keep that continuity each renewal. Buy extended reporting tail of at least five years if you sell, retire, or change carriers without prior acts. Consent to settle should be included. Use any reasonable incident reporting triggers in the policy to lock in coverage when an adverse event occurs.

How do tail coverage, prior-acts, incident reporting, and consent-to-settle work for PT clinics?

Do direct access and scope-of-practice rules in Oregon change what insurance I need as a PT clinic?

Yes. Insurers underwrite to state scope. In Oregon, direct access and supervision are defined by ORS 688.132 allows practice without referral and requires referral when clinical findings warrant. Your compliance affects underwriting and claims. Document screening for red flags and referral triggers in every direct access case.

How do landlord, hospital, or referral contracts in Oregon change my coverage (e.g., Additional Insured, Primary/Non-Contributory, Waiver of Subrogation)?

Contracts in Oregon often require additional insured, primary and noncontributory wording, and waiver of subrogation on GL and sometimes on workers compensation. Ask your broker to use blanket additional insured and blanket waiver endorsements tied to a written contract. Match any specified limits and require the same from subcontractors and 1099 therapists.

Do PT clinics in Oregon need Sexual Abuse and Molestation (SAM) coverage, and what limits are typical?

SAM coverage is recommended for every PT clinic in Oregon, especially those treating minors or vulnerable adults. Typical limits are 100k to 1M per claim. Require background checks, chaperone and door open policies, and documented training to meet carrier risk control conditions.

Are student interns and shadowing PT or PTA students covered under our clinic policy in Oregon?

Policies usually include students when they are acting under your supervision and within PT scope. Keep affiliation agreements on file and follow the states supervision definitions in the PT regulations to avoid gaps.

Yes. Hired and non owned auto covers liability for business use of personal or rented vehicles. Require proof of personal auto insurance from staff, set a minimum driver standard such as no major violations, and use a no patient transport policy unless your HNOA expressly allows it. If you transport patients, purchase commercial auto with the appropriate liability and medical payments limits.

Does Hired and Non-Owned Auto cover therapists driving to home visits and patient transportation in Oregon?

If we classify therapists as 1099 in Oregon, do we still need Workers Compensation, and what are the penalties if we dont?

If you use independent contractors or mobile therapists in Oregon, carry malpractice for each clinician, general liability for premises and operations, workers compensation if state law requires, and hired and non owned auto for business use of personal vehicles. Verify each 1099 therapist has equal or better malpractice and list your clinic as additional insured where possible. Workers compensation triggers are state specific, see ORS 656.017 requires employers with subject workers to maintain workers compensation coverage for thresholds and penalties.

For cash-based PT clinics in Oregon, does insurance differ (malpractice, GL, EPLI, cyber) compared to insurance-billing clinics?

Many PT malpractice forms include license board defense with sublimits such as 25k to 100k and HIPAA breach response with modest sublimits. True cyber losses like ransomware, system restoration, and data extortion are better placed on a separate cyber policy with first party and third party coverage. Select a form that includes regulatory defense and audit response and confirm defense is outside the liability limit.

Does our policy cover payer audits, recoupments, and billing or coding errors in Oregon, or do we need separate regulatory defense coverage?

Standard malpractice may include limited reimbursement for payor inquiries, but robust audit and regulatory defense is available on separate endorsements or stand alone policies. Ask for defense outside the limit and sublimits for audits, recoupments, and civil fines where insurable by law. Follow state documentation rules to strengthen defense.

Schedule offsite activities with your carrier. Extend GL and PL to non owned venues, carry HNOA if staff drive, and use participant waivers where appropriate. For event medical coverage, confirm with the venue and your carrier whether participant injury exclusion applies and add additional insured endorsements as required by the host.

What insurance do we need to teach PT workshops, community classes, or cover sports event sidelines offsite in Oregon?

Contracts in Oregon often require additional insured, primary and noncontributory wording, and waiver of subrogation on GL and sometimes on workers compensation. Ask your broker to use blanket additional insured and blanket waiver endorsements tied to a written contract. Match any specified limits and require the same from subcontractors and 1099 therapists.

How quickly can we get a compliant Certificate of Insurance in Oregon with Additional Insured, Primary Non-Contributory, and Waiver of Subrogation language?

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Oregon

Physical Therapy Clinics in:

Portland Salem Eugene Gresham Hillsboro Beaverton Bend Medford Springfield Corvallis Albany Tigard Lake Oswego Keizer Grants Pass

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