How to structure cannabis coverage before retail sales begin and risks start compounding
When a state legalizes cannabis, it’s easy for clients to focus on the opportunity: new markets, first-mover advantage, rapid growth. But from an insurance standpoint, the exposures walk in long before the first sale. Lee Woodruff, VP of Jencap’s Cannabis Practice, sees this play out consistently during the gap between legalization and operation in emerging markets. For agents, that early-stage window is where placements are won or lost.
Legalized Cannabis States: Why It Matters for Placement
Several states are actively shaping the next wave of cannabis expansion:
- Virginia: Retail sales are expected to begin as early as 2027, but regulatory timelines remain fluid
- Delaware: Retail sales officially launched in 2025, creating immediate demand for operational coverage
- Kentucky: Medical cannabis is approved, with infrastructure and licensing still taking shape
Meanwhile, additional states are moving toward legalization or expansion:
- Louisiana: Legislative momentum continues toward broader access
- Nebraska: Potential ballot initiatives could open the door to legalization
- Pennsylvania and North Carolina: Ongoing legislative discussions signal possible movement
This staggered rollout creates a unique challenge, since clients are making real estate and construction decisions before regulatory certainty fully settles. And that’s risky business.
The Real First Risk: Vacant Properties and Delayed Timelines
One of the most common early-stage scenarios? A client purchases a property in a desirable retail or industrial corridor only to sit on it while licensing, zoning approvals, and permitting play out. That gap can stretch months…sometimes longer.
From an underwriting perspective, this creates a layered exposure:
- Vacant buildings with limited oversight
- Increased susceptibility to vandalism, theft, or fire
- Properties undergoing partial or stalled renovations
- Unclear timelines that complicate policy structure
Standard property markets hesitate here, especially when cannabis intent is disclosed. And even when insurance for dispensaries is available, terms may be restrictive or misaligned with the actual risk. This is where early placement strategy matters. Because once a loss occurs during vacancy, there’s no going back to fix the structure.
Builders’ Risk Is a Critical Phase
Cannabis buildouts tend to involve complex systems tied to cultivation, storage, and compliance requirements, all of which can introduce delays or shift timelines unexpectedly. Contractors may be working under tight deadlines while navigating evolving regulatory requirements, and projects can stall if licensing or approvals lag behind construction progress. At the same time, the financial exposure continues to grow as more capital is invested into the space before operations ever begin.
Coverage needs to reflect those realities. It’s not just about protecting the structure. It’s about accounting for the full scope of improvements, the potential for delays, and the fact that this phase often lasts longer and carries more uncertainty than a typical buildout.
The Transition: From Construction to Full Cannabis Operations
Eventually, the property moves from inactive to operational. That transition is where many placements fall apart if they weren’t structured properly from the start. Shifting from builders’ risk to a full cannabis program requires coordination across multiple coverage lines, including:
- Property (building, contents, and improvements)
- General liability
- Product liability
- Crop coverage (where applicable)
- Business income and extra expense
Once a cannabis business is live, underwriting becomes more data-driven and more specific to how that operation is expected to perform. Several factors tend to shape how carriers approach these risks.
Sales projections set the foundation
Cannabis policies often include 100% minimum and deposit premium structures, which means projected revenue plays a direct role in how coverage is priced and structured. Thoughtful, realistic estimates help align expectations on both sides of the placement.
Geography influences terms more than it may appear
Location can impact everything from CAT exposure to carrier appetite. In wind- or hail-prone regions, for example, deductible structures and terms may shift. Urban density, local crime patterns, and even state-level regulatory frameworks can all factor into how a risk is evaluated.
Market access expands what’s possible
Cannabis remains a specialized space, and carrier approaches can vary widely. Some markets are built for these risks, while others participate more cautiously. Having access to a broader mix of carriers allows for more flexibility in structuring coverage that fits both the operation and the environment it operates in.
Agent Checklist: Placing Cannabis Risks in Newly Legalized States
Before moving forward with a cannabis account in an emerging market, pressure-test the placement with these questions:
- Is the property currently vacant, under renovation, or operational?
- How long is the expected licensing or permitting timeline?
- Does the builders’ risk policy reflect the full scope of improvements and delays?
- Have you mapped out the transition from construction to operational coverage?
- Are sales projections realistic and aligned with underwriting expectations?
- How does the property’s location impact CAT exposure and pricing?
- Do you have access to multiple cannabis markets to compare terms?
With answers in hand, you can identify where these risks tend to hide.
Why This Stage Is Where Specialists Make the Difference
When it comes to cannabis placements in newly legalized states, it’s all about the sequencing, which is why working with specialists can make a world of difference. As Lee Woodruff has seen across emerging markets, pre-operational risks don’t always fit neatly into standard underwriting frameworks, and by the time operations begin, those early choices are already shaping the outcome.
If your client is entering a newly legalized market, the placement starts now. Contact Lee Woodruff’s team of cannabis specialists to help structure coverage so your placements hold up at every stage, evolving with the risk from acquisition through operation.
FAQ: Cannabis Insurance in Emerging Markets
When should insurance be placed for a cannabis business?
Insurance should be placed as soon as a property is acquired or construction begins. Waiting until operations start can leave significant exposure gaps.
Can vacant cannabis properties be insured?
Yes, but terms are often more restrictive. Specialized markets are typically required, especially when cannabis intent is disclosed.
What does builders’ risk cover for cannabis projects?
It generally covers the structure and improvements during construction, but policies must be tailored to account for specialized equipment and delays.
When should coverage transition to a full cannabis program?
Coverage should transition as the business approaches operational status, ideally before opening to ensure no lapse between construction and active coverage.
Why do sales projections matter so much?
Many cannabis policies are written with minimum premium requirements, so projections directly impact cost and underwriting decisions.
Does location affect cannabis insurance pricing?
Yes. Geography influences CAT exposure, theft risk, and carrier appetite, all of which shape pricing and terms.
The Jencap Cannabis Insurance Team
Jencap’s cannabis experts thrive on the challenge of difficult-to-place risks. They have boots on the ground in every major cannabis market and fully understand the unique challenges of both single-state and multi-state cannabis businesses in this budding industry. Our top-of-the-crop cannabis team offers fully-customized, winning insurance solutions that span every class of cannabis business and ancillary services — from the farm to the shelf and everything in between.
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