A clothing store is generally the most attractive occupancy among the options because it presents a comparatively lower property hazard than a scrap yard, restaurant, or auto body shop. Occupancy is one of the central underwriting factors in property insurance because it affects fire load, ignition sources, theft exposure, water damage likelihood, liability hazards, and loss severity. A scrap yard may involve combustibles, outdoor storage, environmental concerns, and difficult fire suppression. A restaurant has cooking equipment, grease, open flame or heat sources, ventilation systems, and high fire frequency potential. An auto body shop may involve spray painting, flammable liquids, welding, solvents, and vehicle storage. A clothing store does have stock that can burn and may have theft exposure, but it lacks the same severe ignition and industrial hazards. Therefore, from an underwriting perspective, it is the most favourable risk class listed. Brokers must understand occupancy because misdescribing it can invalidate underwriting assumptions and create coverage disputes. References/topics: Property Insurance—Exposures; occupancy hazard, property underwriting, fire load, commercial risk classification.