AI Adoption in Property Claims Remains Fragmented Despite Rapid Growth

Only 7% of property insurance carriers have achieved scalable AI success in claims operations, according to a Sedgwick report.
By: | April 9, 2026
AI in commercial property

The gap between ambition and execution in artificial intelligence continues to challenge property insurers. While as many as 82% of carriers now use AI tools somewhere in their operations, just 7% have managed to scale the technology successfully, according to a Sedgwick report on the state of AI in property claims.

Nearly two-thirds of carriers acknowledge a disconnect between their AI vision and current reality, the report said, even as the insurance industry’s AI investments are expected to grow from $10 billion in 2025 to nearly $80 billion by 2032.

The findings underscore a growing tension for risk managers and insurance buyers: insurers are investing heavily in AI-powered claims technology, but fragmented implementation may be limiting the improvements policyholders actually experience.

Fragmented Systems Limit AI’s Potential

Much of the challenge stems from legacy infrastructure. Most claims systems were not designed for the API connectivity that modern AI tools require, according to the report. Rather than being embedded into core workflows, AI is frequently layered on top of existing platforms, which creates operational friction, inconsistent data and diminished performance at scale.

This fragmentation means that AI’s benefits often remain confined to individual steps in the claims process rather than compounding across the full lifecycle, the report said. Ninety percent of property insurers surveyed believe AI must be orchestrated across business processes to maximize their investments.

Data quality is another casualty of the patchwork approach. With multiple tools and vendors supporting different parts of the claims process, carrier data is frequently inconsistent, incomplete or siloed, which weakens the outputs AI systems produce, according to Sedgwick.

Workforce adoption presents its own hurdles. Adjusters managing heavy caseloads and spending significant time in the field may view new tools as a burden rather than a benefit without proper rollout plans and ongoing training, the report noted. Additionally, some carriers delay broader implementation by holding AI tools to a standard of perfection from day one rather than measuring incremental progress against real-world baselines.

Where AI Delivers and Where It Falls Short

Despite the scaling challenges, property insurers that have deployed AI in targeted areas are seeing measurable results. Intake automation has reduced average claim processing times from 10 days to 36 hours, according to the report. AI-powered photo analysis has boosted claim handling efficiency by up to 54%. Some industry experts predict that 80% to 85% of simple claims could eventually be straight-through processed with minimal human involvement as the technology matures, the report said.

The technology is proving most effective for high-volume, repetitive tasks — data extraction, documentation, low-severity claims handling and intake validation — where speed and consistency matter most. Using AI for low-severity claims has produced 80% faster processing times and 50% productivity gains in documentation for some carriers, according to Sedgwick. Without AI, claims handlers spend roughly 30% of their time on low-value administrative work.

However, the report stressed that AI cannot replace human judgment in complex or emotionally sensitive claims. Losses involving ambiguous circumstances, nuanced coverage questions or significant personal impact require professionals who can weigh context, communicate clearly and advocate for policyholders. Human-in-the-loop models — where AI supports but does not substitute for human decision-making — quadruple trust in AI outputs, the report found, and 75% of claims professionals believe AI requires human oversight.

Building a Practical Strategy

Sedgwick outlined several markers of a sound AI strategy in property claims. Carriers should prioritize immediate-impact, low-risk applications before expanding, rather than pursuing sweeping overhauls driven by vendor promises of single-solution transformation, according to Sedgwick.

Strong data governance is essential. as standardization and integration of claims data ensure AI tools can perform consistently and satisfy emerging compliance requirements, the report said.

“AI is accelerating faster than any technology in our lifetime,” said David Guaragna, Sedgwick’s managing director of property operations. “Strategy isn’t optional — it’s the new competitive advantage.”

Looking ahead, conversations around AI governance are expected to intensify as regulatory scrutiny and customer expectations continue to rise.

Obtain the full report here.

The R&I Editorial Team can be reached at [email protected].

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