Most people think of cyber risk as a business problem. It shows up in company data breach headlines, not in conversations about home insurance, but the reality looks quite different. Research from The Hanover found that only 7% of US homeowners currently have personal cyber coverage and fewer than half are even aware such coverage exists.
That awareness gap is exactly what cybercriminals count on.
Your Home Network Is a Target
The cyber risk landscape has expanded well beyond the workplace. Smart TVs, connected thermostats, home security systems, and personal devices all create entry points. According to Munich Re’s 2026 Cyber Insurance Risk Report, the global cost of cybercrime is projected to reach $14 trillion by 2028. While large corporations attract the most media attention, individuals and families are increasingly targeted — particularly those with visible wealth or public profiles.
Affluent households face a specific set of exposures: identity theft that can take years to resolve, ransomware targeting personal files and family photos, digital extortion involving private communications, and fraudulent wire transfers that mimic legitimate financial requests. Standard homeowners policies do not cover these losses.

What Personal Cyber Coverage Actually Does
A personal cyber endorsement or standalone policy typically covers a meaningful set of scenarios that standard homeowners policies exclude:
- Cyber extortion — a threat actor demands payment to release hijacked devices or personal files
- Identity theft remediation — legal fees, lost wages, and the administrative costs of restoring your identity
- Online fraud — losses from phishing scams, fraudulent wire transfers, or account takeovers
- Data breach response — notification costs and credit monitoring if your personal data is compromised
- Cyber bullying — counseling and related costs for families dealing with online harassment
The coverage is often available as an endorsement to an existing homeowners policy meaning the incremental cost is modest compared to the exposure it addresses.

A Practical Next Step
If you haven’t reviewed your homeowners policy for cyber coverage recently, now is the right time. Start by asking your advisor two questions: does my current policy include any cyber protection, and what would a cyber endorsement add?
For higher-net-worth households, a more comprehensive personal cyber policy may warrant a standalone conversation — one that looks at your full digital footprint, the devices on your home network, and any public visibility that might make you a more attractive target.
Tooher-Ferraris works with clients through our Private Client Group to identify coverage gaps like these as part of a comprehensive personal risk review. You can also explore our personal home insurance options to understand how cyber coverage fits into your overall protection strategy.
For a deeper look at the personal cyber landscape, the National Cybersecurity Alliance offers practical guidance for individuals and families at staysafeonline.org.
Ready to close the cyber gap in your personal coverage? The team at Tooher-Ferraris has been helping families protect what they’ve built since 1932.
Contact us today to schedule a no-obligation consultation.





