Children’s indoor soft play centre public liability insurance: why your limit of indemnity really matters

Soft Play

Running an indoor soft play centre is all about creating a safe, fun environment where children can explore, climb, slide and socialise. Most operators invest heavily in safety, staffing, risk management and maintenance ensuring risk assessments are carried out, inspections are undertaken and take pride in the business meeting with the appropriate safety standards and regulations.

Alongside this, your insurance arrangements form a crucial part of your safety net. In particular, your public liability insurance and the limit of indemnity you choose can make a very real difference if something goes wrong. Have you ever considered why that limit matters so much, what can happen if it is not sufficient, and the things you should consider when choosing what level of indemnity you choose to protect you for the risks you face as a children’s indoor soft play centre operator?

Why Do Children’s Indoor Soft Play Operators Need Public Liability Insurance?

Public liability insurance is designed to protect your business if a member of the public alleges that your negligence has caused them injury or property damage. In an indoor soft play setting this will often involve claims from parents on behalf of their children. Typical allegations might relate to slips and trips, injuries caused as a result of faulty or poorly maintained equipment, inadequate supervision, overcrowding, or failures in cleaning and housekeeping. If a claim is made against you, your public liability policy can cover legal defence costs as well as any compensation that you are legally liable to pay, up to the limit specified on the insurance policy. Without that cover, you would need to arrange and pay for your own legal representation and meet any damages awarded by the court out of the business or from personal assets. In a serious injury case, those costs can be very substantial.

Understanding the Public Liability Limit of Indemnity

When arranging your soft play insurance assessing the right limit of indemnity is not simply a tick box exercise. It involves understanding your business model, your contracts, your risk management practices and how courts and insurers approach serious injury claims in the UK. The limit of indemnity is the maximum amount your insurer will pay for any one claim, or in some policies for all claims in a policy period, depending on how the policy is structured. Many indoor soft play centre operators are familiar with limits such as one million pounds, two million pounds or five million pounds and may have chosen a figure in the past because it was suggested by a landlord, a previous broker or because it seemed standard in the market. In practice, the limit of indemnity should be seen as a financial ceiling. If a claim, together with associated legal fees, remains within that ceiling, the policy can respond. If the total cost of the claim exceeds the limit, the excess amount sits with the business and ultimately with the individuals behind it. That is where the consequences of not having an adequate limit can become very problematic.

The Consequences of Not Having an Adequate Limit

When the limit of indemnity is not sufficient, the impact of a large claim can be deeply damaging. In the case of a serious or catastrophic injury to a child, compensation can include future loss of earnings, long term care costs, adaptations to housing and ongoing treatment, in addition to general damages for pain and suffering. Legal costs on both sides can also be significant. If those combined amounts exceed the limit on your insurance policy, there is no automatic safety net for the shortfall. The business may face insolvency, closure or the forced sale of assets. Directors and owners may come under personal financial pressure if they have given personal guarantees or if there is an argument that they have been negligent in arranging appropriate cover for the business. Even where a business survives, the strain on cash flow, relationships and reputation can be profound. In my experience, many operators are surprised when they see realistic examples of how quickly the figures can climb in a serious injury claim scenario. The difference between a two million pound limit and a five million pound limit can feel immaterial on paper. It would not feel immaterial when a claim reaches into seven figures and legal costs continue to accrue over several years.

Factors That Should Influence Your Chosen Limit

There is no single correct limit of indemnity for every indoor soft play centre. The appropriate figure will depend on a number of factors that are unique to your business. You should think carefully about the number of visitors you welcome, the size and layout of your premises, the height and complexity of the play structure, and any higher risk features such as large slides, trampolines, climbing walls or other inherently dangerous activities. Contractual obligations are also important. Landlords, shopping centres, franchise agreements and local authority contracts frequently specify minimum limits of indemnity. Meeting those minimums is essential, but it should be seen as a starting point for you to work from. Guidance from peers, local authorities, industry bodies and health & safety advisors can also give you some additional guidance. Another key factor is the potential severity of injury. While the majority of incidents in soft play are minor, the environment does involve children playing at height, moving at speed, risk of collision, navigating uneven and unpredictable surfaces and interacting with other children and adults. The rare but very serious claim is the one that needs to be considered when setting the limit. That is precisely where the insurance policy needs to work hardest for you.

How Insufficient Policy Limits Can Play Out in Practice

In the event a child suffers a serious or catastrophic injury when using activity equipment such as a fall from height, there will follow complex arguments which can often include supervision, the condition of the activity equipment and whether the safety surfacing was adequate. Medical experts will often be involved, and the claim could take several years to reach final settlement. By the time legal costs and compensation are added together, the total cost could reach seven figures. A policy with a lower limit of indemnity such as one or two million pound might not be sufficient. An incident involving multiple injuries during a busy session, perhaps due to a structural failure of equipment or an issue with flooring could result in several families bringing claims, each with their own legal representation where the costs mount, particularly once defence costs are included. The gap between the total claim value and the policy limit can become very real if the original limit was inadequate. These scenarios illustrate that the figures offered in public liability insurance are not abstract. They relate directly to real lives, real businesses and real financial outcomes.

The Value of Reviewing Your Limit as Your Business Evolves

Many indoor soft play centres change over time. You may have extended your premises, added a café, introduced parties, group bookings or additional activities such as amusement machines, laser tag, bouncy castles, go-karts, trampolines, climbing walls or outdoor play areas. You may also have seen a marked increase in visitor numbers during weekends and holidays. As your business evolves, the risk profile evolves with it. A limit of indemnity that was chosen when you first opened, perhaps to satisfy a basic contractual requirement, may no longer meet your needs or reflect the scale and nature of your operation today. Reviewing the adequacy of the limit provides an opportunity to align your insurance with where your business is now, rather than where it was several years ago.

Discussing Your Limit of Indemnity

Public liability insurance is a core protection for any indoor soft play centre. The limit of indemnity that sits on your policy schedule is much more than a number to satisfy a landlord or tick a compliance box. It is the financial capacity of your safety net at the very moment you need it most. By understanding what the limit of indemnity is, recognising the potential consequences of not having a sufficient limit, and taking account of the specific characteristics of your business, you can make a more informed decision about the level of cover that is right for you. As a leading provider of children’s indoor soft play insurance, we have worked with a wide range of children’s indoor soft play centre operators and have assisted with an extensive catalogue of claim scenarios. This experience enables us to have informed, practical conversations with clients when they are choosing their public liability limit of indemnity. If you are unsure whether your current limit remains appropriate, or if your business has changed since you last reviewed your cover you should take the opportunity to review this and explore increased limit options. We can help talk through the practical and financial implications allowing you to focus on what you do best, providing a safe, enjoyable environment for children and families, with the confidence that your insurance is working properly in the background.