Case Study: Business Interruption Gap — $124,000 Recovery
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This case study is based on a real insurance claim. Names, locations, and identifying details have been redacted to protect client confidentiality. All dollar amounts, timelines, and negotiation strategies are accurate.
The Problem
Sarah M. owned a specialty retail business in downtown Portland, Oregon. The business operated from a leased 4,500 square foot storefront and generated approximately $1.2 million in annual revenue. In March 2025, an electrical fire in an adjacent tenant space caused extensive smoke and water damage to Sarah's store, forcing a complete closure for repairs.
Sarah's commercial property policy included Business Interruption (BI) coverage with a $500,000 limit and a 72-hour waiting period. The policy covered "actual loss of business income" during the period of restoration, plus continuing operating expenses.
The property repairs took 14 weeks to complete. During this time, Sarah's business generated zero revenue but continued to incur fixed expenses including rent, utilities, employee salaries, and loan payments.
Sarah filed a Business Interruption claim and provided the carrier with financial records including tax returns, profit & loss statements, and bank statements. The carrier's business income adjuster reviewed the documentation and issued a settlement offer: $48,000.
Sarah's accountant calculated actual business income loss at approximately $168,000, plus $4,000 in extra expenses (temporary storage and equipment rental). The carrier's calculation appeared to:
- Underestimate pre-loss revenue by using only tax return figures (which excluded cash sales)
- Exclude seasonal revenue trends showing March-June as peak sales period
- Deduct variable expenses that actually continued during closure (employee salaries, marketing)
- Exclude extra expenses for temporary storage and equipment
- Apply an arbitrary 30% reduction for "business downturn" despite no evidence of declining sales
The gap: $124,000 minimum.
Sarah's business was facing bankruptcy. She had depleted her savings to cover fixed expenses during the closure and urgently needed the BI settlement to remain solvent.
Initial Calculation Comparison
| Line Item | Insurance Calculation | Accountant Calculation | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Loss Monthly Revenue (Average) | $68,000 | $102,000 | +$34,000 |
| Seasonal Revenue Adjustment (Mar-Jun Peak) | $0 | +$18,000/month | +$63,000 |
| Total Projected Revenue (14 weeks) | $221,000 | $389,000 | +$168,000 |
| Less: Variable Expenses (COGS) | -$132,600 | -$155,600 | -$23,000 |
| Less: Discontinued Expenses | -$40,400 | -$61,400 | -$21,000 |
| Subtotal: Lost Net Income | $48,000 | $172,000 | +$124,000 |
| Extra Expenses (Storage/Equipment) | $0 | $4,000 | +$4,000 |
| "Business Downturn" Adjustment | -$14,400 (30%) | $0 | +$14,400 |
| Total Business Interruption Loss | $48,000 | $172,000 | |
| Documented Gap | $124,000 | ||
What Was Missing
The insurance adjuster's Business Interruption calculation contained multiple critical errors:
- Underestimated pre-loss revenue: Adjuster relied solely on tax returns, which excluded cash sales and understated actual revenue by 35%. Sarah's point-of-sale records showed significantly higher revenue.
- Ignored seasonal trends: Sarah's business had strong seasonal patterns, with March-June generating 45% of annual revenue. The closure occurred during peak season. Adjuster used annual average instead of seasonal projections.
- Deducted continuing expenses: Adjuster deducted employee salaries and marketing expenses as "variable costs." However, Sarah retained key employees and continued marketing to prepare for reopening—these were continuing expenses covered by BI.
- Excluded extra expenses: Sarah incurred $4,000 in temporary storage and equipment rental to preserve inventory and prepare for reopening. Policy explicitly covered "extra expenses to minimize loss."
- Applied arbitrary downturn adjustment: Adjuster reduced claim by 30% for "business downturn" despite no evidence of declining sales. Sarah's revenue had grown 15% year-over-year for the prior three years.
The Documentation Strategy
Step 1: Policy Analysis
We reviewed Sarah's Business Interruption coverage. Key findings:
- Business Income Coverage: $500,000 limit
- Definition: "Net income (loss) that would have been earned + continuing operating expenses"
- Period of Restoration: From date of loss until property is repaired and business could resume with reasonable speed
- Extra Expense Coverage: $50,000 (covers expenses to minimize loss or continue operations)
- Extended Period of Indemnity: 30 days after reopening (covers ramp-up period)
The policy explicitly stated that BI loss should be calculated based on "the experience of the business before the loss and probable experience thereafter" — requiring consideration of seasonal trends and growth patterns.
Conclusion: The adjuster's calculation violated policy language by ignoring seasonal trends, understating pre-loss revenue, and applying an arbitrary downturn adjustment without evidence.
Step 2: Evidence Collection
We provided Sarah with a Business Interruption evidence checklist:
- Financial records (3 years): Tax returns, profit & loss statements, balance sheets, and general ledgers for prior 3 years to establish revenue trends and growth patterns.
- Point-of-sale records: Daily sales reports from POS system for prior 12 months showing actual revenue including cash sales not reflected in tax returns.
- Seasonal analysis: Month-by-month revenue breakdown for prior 3 years demonstrating seasonal patterns and peak sales periods.
- Expense documentation: Bank statements, payroll records, and vendor invoices documenting continuing expenses during closure (rent, utilities, salaries, insurance, loan payments).
- Extra expense receipts: Invoices for temporary storage, equipment rental, and other expenses incurred to minimize loss.
- Accountant report: Hire CPA to prepare formal Business Interruption loss calculation with supporting schedules and methodology explanation.
- Industry data: Obtain retail industry data for similar businesses showing typical seasonal patterns and growth trends.
Sarah completed this documentation within 4 weeks, spending approximately $2,800 on CPA analysis and report preparation.
Step 3: Structured BI Claim Submission
We provided Sarah with a Business Interruption claim template. The submission included:
- Executive summary explaining the loss and claim amount
- Line-by-line rebuttal of adjuster's calculation with supporting documentation
- CPA-prepared loss calculation with detailed methodology
- POS records proving actual pre-loss revenue
- Seasonal trend analysis with 3-year historical data
- Expense documentation proving continuing costs during closure
- Extra expense receipts with explanation of loss mitigation purpose
- Industry data supporting seasonal projections
- Policy language citations confirming coverage for disputed items
The BI claim submission was 48 pages with 127 supporting exhibits.
Timeline: Week-by-Week Breakdown
Sarah uploaded her policy, adjuster's BI calculation, and initial financial records to Claim Command Pro. We completed policy analysis and identified multiple calculation errors. Provided Business Interruption evidence checklist and CPA referral.
Sarah worked with her CPA to compile 3 years of financial records, POS data, seasonal analysis, expense documentation, and extra expense receipts. CPA prepared formal BI loss calculation with supporting schedules. Sarah obtained retail industry data for seasonal trend validation.
We provided completed BI claim template with CPA report, financial documentation, and policy citations. Sarah submitted via certified mail and email to business income adjuster, claims supervisor, and carrier's commercial claims department. Established 20-day response deadline.
Carrier acknowledged receipt and assigned forensic accountant to review Sarah's documentation. Accountant requested additional bank statements and vendor invoices. Sarah provided supplemental documentation within 5 days.
Carrier issued revised BI calculation: $98,000. Improvement of $50,000, but still $74,000 short. Carrier agreed to use POS revenue data and remove "business downturn" adjustment, but continued to dispute seasonal projections and some continuing expenses.
We provided supplemental BI claim addressing remaining disputes. Sarah's CPA prepared detailed rebuttal of carrier's seasonal projection methodology, citing 3 years of historical data and industry benchmarks. Sarah provided additional payroll records proving employees were retained during closure.
Carrier's forensic accountant and Sarah's CPA conducted direct negotiations on calculation methodology. Key disputes: seasonal revenue projections and classification of certain expenses as "continuing" vs. "variable." Both accountants agreed to use industry-standard BI calculation methodology.
Negotiations stalled at $142,000 offer—still $30,000 short. Sarah sent formal mediation demand letter citing policy's appraisal/mediation clause and state insurance regulations requiring good-faith claim handling. Noted potential bad-faith exposure if carrier continued to dispute well-documented loss.
Carrier's claims supervisor intervened to avoid mediation. Supervisor reviewed all documentation and agreed that Sarah's seasonal projections were supported by historical data. Carrier offered $168,000—accepting Sarah's CPA calculation but excluding extra expenses.
Sarah provided additional documentation proving extra expenses were incurred to minimize loss (policy requirement). Carrier agreed to final settlement of $172,000, including $4,000 in extra expenses. Settlement check issued within 10 business days. Total recovery: $124,000 above initial offer.
Negotiation Tactics Encountered
Throughout the claim process, the insurance carrier employed several tactics common to Business Interruption claims:
Tactic #1: Reliance on Tax Returns Only
The adjuster calculated pre-loss revenue using only tax return figures, which excluded cash sales and understated actual revenue. This is a common tactic—adjusters know that many small businesses underreport cash income on tax returns.
Counter-strategy: Sarah's POS records provided objective, contemporaneous evidence of actual daily sales. The records showed 35% higher revenue than tax returns. The carrier could not dispute POS data and was forced to accept the higher revenue figures.
Tactic #2: Use of Annual Averages Instead of Seasonal Projections
The adjuster calculated lost revenue using annual average monthly revenue, ignoring the fact that the closure occurred during Sarah's peak sales season (March-June). This significantly understated the loss.
Counter-strategy: Sarah's CPA prepared a detailed seasonal analysis using 3 years of historical data, showing that March-June consistently generated 45% of annual revenue. Industry data confirmed that specialty retail businesses have strong seasonal patterns. The policy explicitly required consideration of "probable experience" based on historical trends.
Tactic #3: Deduction of Continuing Expenses
The adjuster deducted employee salaries and marketing expenses as "variable costs" that would not have been incurred during closure. This is a misinterpretation of BI coverage—the policy covers "continuing operating expenses."
Counter-strategy: Sarah provided payroll records and marketing invoices proving these expenses actually continued during closure. She retained key employees to prepare for reopening and continued marketing to maintain customer relationships. Policy language confirmed these were covered continuing expenses.
Tactic #4: Arbitrary "Business Downturn" Adjustment
The adjuster reduced the claim by 30% for "business downturn" without providing any evidence of declining sales. This is a common tactic to reduce large BI claims.
Counter-strategy: Sarah's financial records showed 15% year-over-year revenue growth for the prior 3 years. There was no evidence of business downturn. The carrier was forced to remove this adjustment when confronted with actual financial data.
Business Interruption Claim Challenges
Business Interruption claims are among the most complex and frequently disputed insurance claims:
Challenge #1: Proving Pre-Loss Revenue
Carriers scrutinize revenue figures and often dispute claimed pre-loss income. Policyholders must provide objective, contemporaneous records (POS data, bank deposits, invoices) to prove actual revenue. Tax returns alone are insufficient.
Challenge #2: Seasonal and Trend Adjustments
Most businesses have seasonal patterns and growth trends. Carriers often use annual averages that ignore these patterns. Policyholders must provide multi-year historical data and industry benchmarks to support seasonal projections.
Challenge #3: Continuing vs. Variable Expenses
BI coverage includes "continuing operating expenses" but excludes "variable expenses" that cease during closure. Carriers often misclassify continuing expenses as variable to reduce claims. Policyholders must provide actual expense records proving costs continued during closure.
Challenge #4: Period of Restoration Disputes
Carriers often argue that repairs could have been completed faster, reducing the period of restoration. Policyholders must document actual repair timeline and prove that restoration proceeded with "reasonable speed."
Challenge #5: Forensic Accounting Requirements
Large BI claims require professional accounting analysis. Hiring a CPA to prepare a formal loss calculation significantly increases credibility and leverage. Carriers take CPA-prepared calculations more seriously than policyholder-prepared spreadsheets.
Final Outcome
Settlement Summary
Initial Offer: $48,000
Final Settlement: $172,000
Recovery Amount: +$124,000
Timeline: 16 weeks from initial review to final settlement
Cost: $149 (Claim Command Pro) + $2,800 (CPA analysis) + $0 (no attorney fees)
Sarah recovered $124,000 through structured documentation and professional accounting analysis. The final settlement covered her actual business income loss based on POS revenue data, seasonal projections, and documented continuing expenses.
The $172,000 settlement allowed Sarah to pay down accumulated debt, restore working capital, and avoid bankruptcy. Her business successfully reopened and returned to profitability within 90 days.
Lessons Learned
1. POS Records Are Essential
Point-of-sale records provide objective, contemporaneous evidence of actual revenue. Tax returns alone are insufficient and often understate actual income. Policyholders should preserve daily sales records for at least 3 years.
2. Seasonal Trends Must Be Documented
Most businesses have seasonal patterns. Multi-year historical data demonstrating seasonal trends is essential to support projections. Industry benchmarks provide additional validation.
3. Continuing Expenses Require Proof
Carriers will dispute continuing expenses unless policyholders provide actual expense records (bank statements, payroll records, invoices) proving costs continued during closure. Assumptions are not sufficient.
4. CPA Analysis Adds Credibility
Hiring a CPA to prepare a formal BI loss calculation significantly increases leverage. Carriers take professional accounting analysis more seriously than policyholder-prepared calculations. The $2,800 CPA cost generated $124,000 in additional recovery.
5. Policy Language Drives Coverage
BI policies require calculation based on "probable experience" considering historical trends and seasonal patterns. Citing specific policy language forces carriers to use proper methodology.
6. Mediation Threat Forces Settlement
When negotiations stall, threatening mediation or appraisal forces carriers to reassess their position. Mediation is expensive and creates bad-faith exposure if the carrier's position is unreasonable.
Get Help with Your Business Interruption Claim
If your Business Interruption claim was underpaid or denied, Claim Command Pro can help you recover what you're owed.
We provide policy analysis, evidence checklists, CPA referrals, and professional templates for Business Interruption claims.
Start Your Claim Review — $149Average recovery: $12,000-$124,000 per claim