How much does two weeks of disruption cost a small business?

More than 550,000 small businesses in the UK have been forced to halt trading due to a disruption in the last two years, research finds.

The average cost of keeping a small business afloat while unable to trade for two weeks after a disruption is estimated to be £8,775, according to a study by small business insurer Direct Line for Business.

Destroyed stock and delivery vehicles breaking down are just a couple of incidents that have been known to cause a halt in business trading.

The average small business believes that it would last around eight months and three weeks if it were forced to halt trading, with sole traders (nine months, one week) faring better than micro-businesses – businesses employing fewer than 10 people (nine months), and small businesses (six months, two weeks).

Of those companies that have had to cease trading due to business disruption, the period of shutdown lasted, on average, more than three months. This will be of particular concern for the one in five (21 per cent) small businesses that claim that they would not be able to survive if their businesses had to cease trading for more than a month.

Reduction in profit (48 per cent), reduction in revenue (42 per cent), loss of customers (39 per cent) and putting personal money into the business (32 per cent) were found to be the most common impacts of an interruption in trading on small business owners.

Nick Breton, head of Direct Line for Business says there are many reasons a business might need to halt trading and unfortunately a lot of them are unforeseen.

‘Keeping a business afloat when there is a disruption can be stressful enough, especially when there are no funds being generated.

‘Business owners must ensure they have adequate insurance to minimise any disruption should an incident occur. Business interruption insurance covers your business if your insured property has been damaged resulting in a loss of income.’

Further reading on small business insurance

Ben Lobel

Ben Lobel

Ben Lobel was the editor of SmallBusiness.co.uk from 2010 to 2018. He specialises in writing for start-up and scale-up companies in the areas of finance, marketing and HR.

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