The Answer in 60 Seconds

A Singapore logistics, warehousing, or freight forwarding business typically requires: business registration with ACRA; registration with Singapore Customs as a Declaring Agent (plus any licensee category the commodities require); LTA commercial vehicle registration for an owned fleet; an SCDF Fire Safety Certificate for warehouse premises (with elevated standards for high-stack or hazardous-commodity warehouses); URA industrial zoning compliance; and, on industrial land, JTC lease compliance. Insurance baseline: Public Liability (often S$3M-S$10M+ given operations), Marine Cargo Liability for cargo in custody, Goods in Trust / Bailee cover for warehouse operations, Property/Fire for warehouse and equipment, Motor (Commercial Vehicle Fleet) for vehicles, WICA for staff (manual operations heavy), Cyber Liability for operational systems and customer data, Crime / Money for cash handling and inventory shrinkage, and Errors and Omissions cover for freight forwarding operations. The most distinctive risk: cargo in custody — often high-value and the most material claim category. Goods in Trust / Bailee cover (also called Customers' Goods or Warehouseman's Legal Liability) is foundational, because standard PL excludes property in the insured's care, custody, and control.

The Sourced Detail

Singapore's logistics sector — warehousing, freight forwarding, last-mile delivery, cold chain, e-commerce fulfilment, and specialised logistics — is foundational to the economy. Operations span small specialist freight forwarders to large warehouse operators to fast-growing e-commerce fulfilment providers. Each has specific insurance considerations.

Business model categories

  • Pure freight forwarding — booking transport on behalf of shippers; a commercial intermediary, with Errors and Omissions exposure and, where the forwarder issues its own bills of lading, NVOCC (Non-Vessel Operating Common Carrier) considerations.
  • Warehouse operator — storing goods for customers, which carries bailee responsibility for those goods.
  • Integrated logistics — a combination of forwarding, warehousing, and transport, with the operational complexity that brings.
  • Last-mile delivery — final-delivery operations, transport-heavy, often built around e-commerce models.
  • Cold chain / specialised — commodity-specific operations with equipment dependencies.
  • Industry-specific — pharmaceutical, food and beverage, dangerous goods, and high-value-goods logistics.

The licensing baseline

  • ACRA registration — foundational, with the appropriate business activity codes.
  • Singapore Customs — registration as a Declaring Agent and use of TradeNet for permit applications, with the registrations the commodities handled require.
  • LTA commercial vehicles — registration of the owned fleet in the appropriate vehicle categories, with the corresponding driver licensing across the GVW classes.
  • Industry licensing — dangerous goods and pharmaceutical logistics (under HSA frameworks) carry their own licensing.
  • Premises — an SCDF Fire Safety Certificate is mandatory, with safety standards set by the premises type (warehouse, distribution centre) and occupancy.

The Public Liability layer

PL responds to property damage and injury arising from premises, transport, equipment, and cargo-handling operations.

Limit considerations:

  • Standard limits S$3M–S$10M+ typical
  • Higher for higher-risk operations
  • Landlords and commercial customers frequently set their own minimums

Points to confirm with the insurer: that premises operations, transport operations, equipment such as forklifts, and cargo handling are all within cover.

The Goods in Trust / Bailee layer

This is the critical specialty layer for warehouse operations. PL typically excludes "property in the care, custody and control of the insured" — but for a warehouse operator, customers' goods in storage are the foundational exposure. Goods in Trust / Bailee cover (also called Customers' Goods or Warehouseman's Legal Liability) fills that gap.

Limit considerations:

  • A per-customer limit, a per-location aggregate, and an annual aggregate
  • Sized to the highest-value commodities held

Points to confirm with the insurer:

  • An all-risks basis (theft, fire, water damage, accidental damage)
  • That the commodity types stored are within cover, including any cold-chain considerations
  • The exclusions, reviewed against what the warehouse actually holds

The Marine Cargo Liability layer

For freight forwarding and cargo handling, Marine Cargo Liability responds to damage or loss during cargo handling and transport coordination, on the basis of the forwarder's liability under its trading conditions.

Trading conditions. Most Singapore forwarders contract on the Singapore Logistics Association (SLA) Standard Trading Conditions, which set the liability limits and commercial framework for the forwarder's services. Operating on defined trading conditions is itself a risk control — confirm the conditions are incorporated into customer contracts.

Points to confirm with the insurer: Errors and Omissions cover for the forwarding function, treatment of NVOCC operations, and the territorial scope.

The Motor / Fleet layer

For an owned vehicle fleet, commercial motor (fleet) cover handles the fleet across its vehicle categories — last-mile delivery vehicles, freight vehicles, and specialised and cold-chain vehicles.

Third-party liability cover is mandatory under the Motor Vehicles (Third-Party Risks and Compensation) Act 1960. Beyond that statutory minimum, Goods in Transit cover responds to cargo carried on the company's own vehicles — confirm it is in place where the operation moves its own freight.

The WICA layer

Logistics operations carry substantial WICA exposure. Warehouse staff (loading, unloading, picking, packing), drivers, and yard staff are all within WICA, and the high-frequency injuries are lifting and strain injuries, equipment-related injuries (forklifts, conveyors), falls during loading and unloading or work at height, and traffic and vehicle-related injuries.

A Common-Law / Employer's Liability extension is generally appropriate for logistics, given the WSHA exposure (see Article 22) and the higher-risk operations. Where subcontractors are used, their staff are covered by their own WICA — coordinate this through subcontractor agreements and verify their cover.

Cyber considerations

Logistics operations hold customer commercial data, shipment and tracking data, payment information, and increasingly digital operational systems.

The Cyber exposures worth covering: BEC on customer and supplier payments; operational disruption from a system failure; PDPA exposure for personal shipping data; and cyber-extortion.

A workable Cyber stack: comprehensive Cyber with adequate limits; BEC / social-engineering-fraud cover; business interruption for operational disruption; and cover for PDPA Section 26D notification costs.

Stage-by-stage insurance build

Pre-launch:

  • ACRA registration
  • Singapore Customs registration, plus any per-commodity licensing
  • Insurance package procured

Year 1 (small operator, 5–15 staff):

  • PL with logistics scope
  • Goods in Trust / Bailee
  • Marine Cargo Liability where applicable
  • Property/Fire for the warehouse
  • Motor for the fleet
  • WICA for staff
  • Cyber Liability with BEC cover

Years 2–5 (growth):

  • Higher limits across the board
  • D&O once incorporated
  • EPL as headcount grows
  • Industry-specific cover

Established operator (50+ staff, multi-site):

  • A comprehensive, multi-site programme, with industry-specific specialised cover where the commodities require it

Operational considerations

  • Cold chain — equipment dependencies and high commodity values; business interruption cover for a refrigeration failure is the key addition.
  • Pharmaceutical — the HSA framework, high commodity values, and quality-assurance obligations.
  • Dangerous goods — dedicated licensing, operational standards, incident response, and their own underwriting considerations.
  • E-commerce fulfilment — consumer-facing operations with platform integration and heightened Cyber considerations.
  • Last-mile delivery — transport-heavy, often platform-based, raising WICA / contractor-classification questions under the Platform Workers Act (see Article 12).

Premium considerations

Illustrative annual ranges for Singapore logistics operators (actual premiums depend on operations, cargo values, and limits):

Small freight forwarder (5–15 staff):

  • PL / Marine Cargo Liability / E&O: S$5,000–S$15,000
  • Cyber with BEC: S$3,000–S$10,000
  • WICA, Property: S$3,000–S$10,000
  • Total annual insurance budget: typically S$10,000–S$40,000

Mid-size warehouse operator (20–80 staff):

  • Higher PL / Bailee limits, comprehensive cargo cover, substantial WICA, and fleet motor
  • Total: typically S$30,000–S$120,000

Larger integrated logistics:

  • A comprehensive, multi-site programme; total scales with the operation

Operational risk management

Insurers underwrite logistics on:

  • Operational discipline — safety procedures, PPE and equipment, incident response, and quality standards.
  • Cargo management — receipt and dispatch procedures, tracking, and incident reporting.
  • Vehicle / fleet management — maintenance schedules, driver verification, and incident management.
  • Cyber discipline — MFA on all systems, BEC awareness training, payment-verification protocols, and platform security.
  • Premises management — safety features, commodity-specific provisions, access controls, and evacuation provisions.
  • Documentation — cargo records, customer agreements incorporating the trading conditions, commercial agreements, and incident reports.

Common Mistakes / What Goes Wrong

  1. Goods in Trust / Bailee cover gap. The core warehouse exposure left uninsured.
  2. PL limit inadequate for the operation. Major exposure on fire or cargo damage.
  3. Marine Cargo Liability gaps for the forwarding function.
  4. No BEC awareness or Cyber cover. A high-frequency exposure.
  5. WICA scope too narrow for warehouse and driver staff. Significant manual exposure.
  6. Fleet motor or Goods-in-Transit gaps on owned vehicles.
  7. No industry-aware cover for specialised commodities — cold chain, pharma, dangerous goods.
  8. Trading conditions not incorporated into customer contracts. Commercial protections lost.
  9. No subcontractor insurance verification. Cascade exposure.
  10. Cross-border operations placed without confirming jurisdictional cover.

What This Means for Your Business

For Singapore logistics founders:

  1. Match the insurance to the business model. Forwarding, warehousing, and integrated logistics differ.

  2. Goods in Trust / Bailee cover is foundational for a warehouse. Standard PL excludes goods in custody.

  3. Set PL limits proportionate to the operation. Logistics exposures can be material.

  4. Hold comprehensive Cyber with BEC cover. A high-frequency exposure.

  5. Build comprehensive WICA for the manual workforce.

  6. For specialised commodities (cold chain, pharma, dangerous goods), use specialist underwriting.

  7. Incorporate trading conditions into every customer contract.

  8. Review annually as the operation evolves.

The logistics insurance build is comprehensive, reflecting the operational complexity, cargo values, and exposure profile. The investment is meaningful but proportionate to operational scale.

Questions to Ask Your Adviser

  1. For my logistics business model, what insurance structure is appropriate?
  2. How is my Goods in Trust / Bailee structured per customer and per location?
  3. Does my Cyber Liability include comprehensive BEC and operational disruption cover?
  4. For my fleet operations, how is Motor and Goods in Transit structured?
  5. As I scale or add specialised services, what insurance milestones should I plan for?

Related Information

Published 5 May 2026. Source verified 5 May 2026. COVA is an introducer under MAS Notice FAA-N02. We do not recommend insurance products. We provide factual information sourced from primary regulators and route you to a licensed IFA who can match a policy to your specific situation.