Cyber, Catastrophe, and AI Top Risk Concerns as Protection Gaps Persist, Survey Finds

Insurance buyers and sellers are aligned on the threats reshaping the market, but coverage gaps remain in flood and cyber, according to a joint report from Munich Re US and the Insurance Information Institute.
By: | June 11, 2026
business risks

Cyber incidents, economic pressures, and artificial intelligence ranked among the top concerns for the overall market surveyed, with more than 50% of respondents identifying each as a significant risk, according to RiskScan 2026, a survey of more than 800 U.S.-based insurance buyers and sellers conducted by Munich Re US and the Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I).

The findings, which compare results from a parallel 2024 survey, point to a risk environment defined by interconnected threats rather than isolated events. They also reveal persistent gaps between awareness and coverage that cut across both personal and commercial lines.

Interconnected Threats Dominate Risk Agendas

Cyber incidents were identified as a top insurance risk by 53% of overall respondents, up from 48% in 2024, with middle market decision-makers and P&C agents and brokers each registering 59%, the highest among all segments. The FBI’s Internet Crime Report recorded losses exceeding nearly $21 billion in 2025, underscoring the scale of the threat.

Despite that exposure, a significant protection gap persists. According to the report, 98% of cyber claims analyzed by NetDiligence from 2020 to 2024 came from organizations under $2 billion in revenue, yet many small and midsize businesses remain uninsured or underinsured, in part because cyber risk feels abstract compared to physical perils.

Business interruption ranked as the second leading insurance risk among business and insurance professionals, cited by 46% of respondents, up from 45% in 2024, the report noted. Cyberattacks, natural disasters, labor strikes, and geopolitical conflicts all capable of triggering substantial operational disruptions. A separate Gallagher survey cited in the report found that 86% of companies incurred supply chain losses in the past year, with only about one-third maintaining full coverage.

Natural catastrophes ranked third among top insurance risks for the overall market at 45%, up sharply from 35% in 2024. Non-peak perils — floods, severe thunderstorms, winter storms, and wildfires — drove much of that concern.

Insured losses from non-peak perils reached a record $88 billion in the U.S. in 2025, according to Munich Re, with severe thunderstorm losses alone reaching $42 billion, well above the 10-year average of $29 billion. Wildfire concern rose across all segments since 2024, with the January 2025 Los Angeles-area fires producing roughly $40 billion in insured losses, making it the most expensive wildfire disaster to date, the report said.

AI Leads Emerging Technology Concerns; Legal System Abuse Gains Recognition

Artificial intelligence was identified as the most impactful emerging technology by 71% of overall respondents, up from 64% in 2024, with P&C agents and brokers registering the highest rate at 78%. Smart devices and the Internet of Things followed, cited by 45% and 39% of respondents, respectively.

The U.S. AI market is projected to grow from $173.56 billion in 2025 to $976.23 billion by 2035, the report noted, bringing with it operational, regulatory, and liability risks that businesses are still working to quantify.

On the cost side, the rise in frequency and severity of natural disasters was cited by 58% of respondents as a primary driver of P&C insurance costs, followed by economic inflation at 55%. Legal system abuse was identified by 43% of respondents as a cost driver, up from 34% in 2024.

The report characterized this shift as meaningful: in 2024, only insurance professionals flagged legal system abuse as a significant concern, but by 2026, middle market decision-makers and small business owners had joined them.

Two other notable shifts emerged in the 2026 data. Both business professionals and consumers showed a substantial decline in concern about changes in climate, with its ranking dropping from first to sixth overall, falling to 30% from 48% in 2024. And for the first time, the survey asked respondents about the societal value of (re)insurance; the top three responses were helping communities recover quickly after a loss, providing long-term financial stability, and encouraging risk prevention and resilience.

Obtain the full report here. &

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

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