Crypto Insurance Gap Reveals $3.31 Trillion Market Opportunity

With only 11% of cryptocurrency holders insured despite strong demand, insurers face both significant challenges and substantial opportunities, according to commentary from AM Best.
By: | June 17, 2025

The cryptocurrency insurance market remains largely untapped despite a $3.31 trillion digital asset market, with only 11% of crypto holders currently insured while 42% of uninsured holders express willingness to purchase coverage, according to a recent commentary by AM Best.

This massive gap between demand and supply presents both significant challenges and substantial opportunities for insurers willing to navigate this emerging sector.

With approximately 55 million Americans—roughly 16% of the U.S. population—using cryptocurrency according to an April 2025 survey from the National Cryptocurrency Association, the market has achieved substantial mainstream adoption, AM Best noted. Yet insurance penetration remains remarkably low at just 11% of global cryptocurrency holders, according to GlobalData’s 2024 Emerging Trends Insurance Consumer Survey.

“A limited number of traditional carriers currently write crypto coverage, often through surplus lines or specialty markets,” said Edin Imsirovic, director, AM Best. “This reluctance stems from a number of factors, including cybersecurity and theft risk, because crypto assets are vulnerable to hacking, and private keys are vulnerable to theft and fraud.”

The demand signals are unmistakable, according to the commentary. Beyond the 42% of uninsured crypto holders willing to purchase coverage, an additional 26% remain open to considering it, the commentary stated. This unmet demand highlights the current mismatch between market appetite and available insurance capacity, particularly as institutional engagement continues to grow and the sector matures from its modest base.

Insurers Navigate Complex Risk Landscape

Traditional insurers face significant hurdles in the cryptocurrency space, stemming from the assets’ non-traditional, intangible nature and extreme volatility, according to the commentary.

The lack of actuarial data and claims history has historically made underwriters hesitant to offer comprehensive coverage.

“Insurers worry about loss aggregation, and as a result, insurers that do write crypto often provide low coverage limits,” Imsirovic said. “Insurers rely on historical loss data to price and model risks. For crypto, meaningful loss data is scarce, given the short history and many companies self-insuring in the past.”

Bitcoin’s history of multi-thousand percent rises in value followed by 80% crashes exemplifies the volatility challenges insurers must navigate, AM Best’s commentary noted.

Cybersecurity and theft risks top the list of concerns for both insurers and consumers. Crypto assets remain vulnerable to hacking, while private keys face constant threats from theft and fraud. These events can trigger catastrophic losses, creating accumulation concerns for insurers who lack sufficient experience and data to make informed predictions about adequate pricing, AM Best found.

Consumers themselves identify theft and hacking of digital assets as the primary risk they want covered, indicating strong demand potential but placing insurers in positions of potentially large criminal attack payouts.

Regulatory uncertainty compounds these challenges. Evolving regulations at federal, state, and international levels create hesitation among insurers about covering activities that might later be deemed regulatory breaches, according to the commentary. The ambiguous treatment of crypto assets and smart contract liabilities in court systems has kept many insurers on the sidelines.

Despite these barriers, insurer willingness is slowly expanding. Several Lloyd’s of London syndicates affiliated with Arch, Atrium, Beazley, and Canopius, along with traditional insurers including AXA, AIG, and Chubb, have begun underwriting crypto risks, according to AM Best. Marsh recently launched an insurance facility for digital asset custodians, including financial institutions, with capacity reaching $825 million, the commentary added.

Regulatory Clarity Drives Market Evolution

Federal crypto policy developments may significantly shape the insurance market’s trajectory. The introduction of the “Securities Clarity Act” bill in March represents a potential breakthrough, introducing the term “investment contract asset” to define digital assets sold under investment contracts that don’t automatically become securities. If enacted, this legislation could reduce legal uncertainty for many market participants, the commentary suggested.

State-level regulatory environments vary considerably in their crypto-friendliness, the commentary stated. Wyoming leads by explicitly allowing insurers to use digital assets in their investment portfolios, significantly reducing regulatory uncertainty. The state has established legal frameworks for decentralized autonomous organizations as business entities and even passed legislation for a state-issued stablecoin.

Vermont’s position as the leading U.S. domicile for captive insurance companies offers attractive options for cryptocurrency businesses seeking self-insurance solutions, AM Best noted. The state’s 2020 deployment of an insurance regulatory sandbox and explicit empowerment of its insurance regulator to explore blockchain technology further enhances its appeal.

Texas and Florida have broadly courted crypto and fintech companies, with Texas offering cheap power for mining operations and Florida establishing Miami as a crypto hub. While neither state has specific insurance incentives yet, their general pro-crypto stance suggests potential future extensions to insurance frameworks, the commentary found.

Read the full commentary from AM Best here. &

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

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