Working Mom;131110 wrote: In our ongoing debate of PTA versus PTO, the pro-PTA mom has reported that PTAs get a lower rate for liability insurance than non-PTAs. According to her, PTAs are viewed as less risky - I assume because of the checks & balances provided by the National & State PTA.
Can anyone verify whether this is true? If you switched from a PTA to a PTO, are you paying a higher insurance premium? I haven't seen this raised in other posts - but I do apologize if this has already been covered somewhere.
Hi WM --
By-and-large (it depends somewhat on your PTA state), PTAs pay less for insurance.
It's got nothing to do, however, with PTA checks and balances. Rather, it's a result of volume of business -- more PTAs are insured, spreading the risk around a bit more broadly.
PTOs can ge insurance on their own or they can join PTO Today's PTO Today Plus rogram and get group-discount insurance. The PTO Today Plus rate is a good deal less than what most PTOs can get on their own and typically somewhat higher than what most PTAs pay.
It's typically exactly the same coverage, so the insurance argument really should be factored into the cost-benefit analysis. It works something like this:
PTA
Annual membership dues paid out to county, state, + national + insurance premium compared to benefits received (that you use) from being a PTA.
PTO
PTO Today Plus membership fee (optional) + insurance premium.
Usually, the cost of being a PTO is far less than the cost of being a PTA.
Tim