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S&p Global Analysis: Why P&c Insurer Profitability Surged In Q1 2026

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According to S&P Global Market Intelligence, the U.S. property and casualty insurance industry achieved record-breaking underwriting profitability in the first quarter of 2026, with a combined ratio of 89.5% before policyholder dividends.

This marks the best first-quarter performance in at least 25 years. The industry's net underwriting gain reached $22.10 billion, driven primarily by exceptional results in homeowners' multiperil and private auto lines.

When you consider the ongoing challenges in select casualty segments and increased competition in key markets, the first-quarter results are particularly noteworthy.

Why catastrophe losses haven't derailed profits

These days, property insurance news is all about billion-dollar hurricanes, wildfires, and storm losses. While they attract a great deal of attention, their impact on private insurers was not uniform.

“For example, an excessive amount of damage from Hurricane Helene in 2024 stemmed from flooding, which was largely borne by the National Flood Insurance Program and/or non-U.S. reinsurance companies rather than U.S. private homeowners' insurers, limiting the effect on carriers’ books,” said Jason Woleben, insurance analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

In 2025, hurricane-related losses were exceptionally low, reportedly under $1 billion, compared with an average of roughly $30 billion annually from 2016 through 2024.

“This unusually benign hurricane season, combined with the full earning-in of several years of aggressive rate increases, boosted industry profitability over the past two years,” Woleben added.

A delayed payoff years in the making

The analysis by S&P Global Market Intelligence points to major improvements in property and private auto results. According to Woleben, the primary driver is the realization of several years of aggressive rate hikes.

“Insurance companies are now finally earning the benefits of these price increases in their books, which has increased profitability,” Woleben explained.

Other risk management strategies, like separate wind and hail deductibles as well as non-renewals, have also helped with overall loss mitigation, but the delayed payoff is the key behind the impressive profits.

Are these profits sustainable?

The industry is past the peak of the hard market cycle in both private auto and commercial property, with signs of material softening in commercial property.

“Concerns about a return of inflationary pressures in private auto will likely cause carriers to remain disciplined even as pricing begins to moderate,” Woleben said.

Insurance companies will be cautious in their approach to lowering rates, as meaningful profitability pressures persist, including social inflation as well as elevated costs for materials for repairs and replacements.

Additionally, the risk of catastrophic losses can quickly erode margins after a relatively light 2025.

“While the industry should continue to generate a period of strong profitability in these lines, we don’t view current earnings levels as a new normal. Instead, profitability is more likely to remain favorable in the near term before gradually moderating,” Woleben added.

The advisor takeaway

As you meet with clients, agents are likely finding that many of them are frustrated about premium increases and feel insurance companies are over-earning.

Emphasize the fact that the record profits stem from the big rate hikes insurers put in place over the past few years, Woleben said.

“Make it clear that those gains aren’t likely to last forever because they’re not,” he said.

They’re mostly due to the cycle, not a sign that insurers are going to consistently achieve excess returns.

“It looks like the industry is near the top of this cycle, with many companies now slowing down or even cutting rates. Profitability could drop quickly if a big catastrophe hits, which shows how these results are really tied to the ups and downs of the cycle,” Woleben explained.

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