Commercial Insurance Rates Rise 3% on Average in Q1 2025

Umbrella/excess liability and commercial auto lead with 6.7% hikes; small businesses and transportation sector hit hardest: MarketScout.
By: | April 7, 2025
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U.S. commercial insurance rates rose 3% on average in the first quarter of 2025, up from the previous quarter, with umbrella/excess liability and auto coverages experiencing the highest rate increases, according to MarketScout’s Market Barometer.

The Market Barometer, based on pricing surveys by the Risk & Insurance Education Alliance, has reported rate increases for commercial lines since 2017. The size of commercial lines rate increases steadily shrank throughout 2024. In Q1 2024, the composite rate was up 4.36%, followed by a 3.9% increase in Q2, a 3.8% increase in Q3 and closing out the year with a fourth-quarter-rate composite increase of 2.64%.

As in previous quarters, the 3% composite increase in Q1 2025 includes notable variations across different coverage categories.

“Umbrella and excess liability, along with automobile coverages, saw the most significant rate hikes this quarter—both increasing by 6.7%,” said Richard Kerr, CEO of Novatae Risk Group, parent of MarketScout.

Property-related coverages also saw above-average increases, with both commercial property and business interruption insurance rising by 3.6%. General liability rates were up 2.3% in the first quarter.

In contrast, several coverage lines experienced relatively modest increases, MarketScout reports.

Workers’ compensation stands out as the only coverage category showing flat pricing (0% change), continuing its pattern of stability compared to other commercial lines. Professional liability (up 1.3%), D&O liability (up 1%), and EPLI (up 1%) all showed comparatively restrained rate increases, suggesting more balanced market conditions in these segments.

Cyber liability, which had seen dramatic rate increases in previous years, appears to be stabilizing with a relatively modest 1.7% increase, MarketScout reported.

Transportation and Small Businesses Bear the Brunt

The impact of rate increases is not being felt equally across all industries and business sizes. Transportation companies face the most challenging market conditions, with rates rising by 6% – double the overall commercial lines average.

Habitational businesses also faced above-average increases at 4.7% in the first quarter. Meanwhile, manufacturing, contracting, and service industries all experienced increases at or near the composite average, while public entity and energy sectors fared slightly better with increases of 1.7% and 2.3%, respectively.

When examining the data by account size, a clear pattern emerges: Smaller businesses are bearing a disproportionate burden of rate increases. Small accounts (under $25,000 in premium) faced the steepest Q1 rate increases at 4.7%, followed by medium accounts ($25,001 – $250,000 in premiums) at 3.7%. In contrast, large accounts ($250,001 – $1 million) saw increases matching the overall market average of 3%, while jumbo accounts (more than $1 million) experienced the lowest increases at 2.3%.

View the MarketScout Market Barometers here. &

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

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