

Understanding LEG 3 wording in a builders risk policy
On large multifamily developments - particularly garden-style and mid-rise projects with multiple trades and complex sequencing - construction defects are a common source of builders risk claims. But coverage for those claims depends heavily on one often-overlooked clause.
The “LEG” defects clauses, developed by the London Engineering Group, define how a builders risk policy responds when faulty work causes damage. The difference between LEG 1, LEG 2, and LEG 3 can determine whether your insurance absorbs the loss - or your balance sheet does.
Most Builders Risk Policies Don’t Include LEG 3 by Default
While LEG 3 is often discussed as a “market standard” or lender-aligned clause, it’s not automatically included in most off-the-shelf builders risk policies - especially for multifamily developments. Many policies either:
Why That’s a Problem
LEG Clause Comparison
| Clause | What It Covers | What It Excludes | Common Use | Practical Implications |
| LEG 1 | Defective part and all resulting damage. | Very little (broadest). | Rare (very high premium). | Covers virtually everything — but not typically offered. |
| LEG 2 | Resulting damage only. | Defective part is excluded, even if damage results. | Common default. | Leaves developers exposed to expensive trade-level defects. |
| LEG 3 | Resulting damage (same as LEG 2). | Excludes defective part only — but drafted more precisely. | Preferred for multifamily. | Strikes balance: protects against most high-dollar loss events, lender-compliant. |
Why It Matters for Multifamily Projects
Real-World Example:
A joint venture experienced defective welds that caused structural damage during a major infrastructure project. The insurer denied coverage, arguing the defect was not “resulting damage.”
The court disagreed, confirming that under LEG 3, all resulting physical damage is covered, even if the initial defect is excluded.
For multifamily developers, the takeaway is simple:
"If a single construction defect causes damage across multiple units or structures, a LEG 3 clause can mean the difference between a covered $5 million claim and an uninsured one."
Risk Manager’s Perspective
At PEAK Risk Advisors, we advocate for LEG 3 wording in every builders risk program because it:
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