Global Insurtech Funding Surges 90% in Q1 2025

AI-driven innovation and strategic investments fuel the 'insurtech spring' as P&C insurtechs lead recovery with $1.13 billion in fresh capital, Gallagher Re reports.
By: | May 12, 2025
insurtech - auto

Global insurtech funding reached $1.31 billion in the first quarter of 2025, surging 90.2% over Q4 2024 funding as the industry rebounded from 2024’s volatile second half, according to Gallagher Re’s latest quarterly analysis.

This dramatic recovery was driven by P&C insurtechs raising $1.13 billion, the highest level since the third quarter of 2022, and AI-centered companies securing 61.2% of Q1 deals, marking what some industry experts are calling an “insurtech spring,” according to the report.

The insurtech funding landscape has undergone significant transformation since 2024, a year in which the market displayed a “Jekyll and Hyde” character, the report noted:

  • H1 2024: Characterized by stability and maturity, with consistent transaction volume and significant early-stage funding.
  • H2 2024: Marked by extreme volatility, with Q3 seeing five mega-rounds accounting for 55% of $1.4 billion total funding, followed by Q4’s sharp decline to $690 million.

The first quarter of 2025 has reversed Q4’s downward trend, according to the report, with three $100 million+ mega-round deals going to P&C insurtechs: Quantexa ($175 million), Openly ($123 million), and Instabase ($100 million). The average insurtech deal size increased 42.1% over Q4 to $15.77million.

However, not all segments are experiencing equal growth, Gallagher Re reported. Early-stage insurtech funding dropped to a nearly five-year low in Q1 2025, declining 11.9% from Q4 2024. Average early-stage deal size fell to $3.71 million, the lowest since Q1 2017, despite an increase in deal count to 51 from 41 in Q4.

The report shows that AI-centered companies have become the dominant focus, receiving $710.86 million across 60 deals in Q1 2025 alone, compared to approximately 30% of funding in H1 2024.

Auto Insurtechs, AI Applications

Auto insurance, representing a significant portion of insurtech innovation, is experiencing profound transformation through AI applications, according to Gallagher Re, which focused on activity in this sector in the Q1 report.

“Of the almost $60 billion that has been invested into insurtechs since 2012, we estimate that $13.13 billion has been invested into auto insurtech companies,” the report stated. “This covers insurtechs that have developed software and tools for (re)insurers to use, and also insurtechs that themselves originate auto business as an MGA/carrier.”

Gallagher Re identified several key AI capabilities with major impact on auto insurance:

  1. Automation: Streamlining corporate processes by identifying laborious human tasks and performing them more efficiently.
  2. Chatbots: Providing 24/7 customer service, guiding users through claims processing, and detecting potential fraud.
  3. Image Recognition: Assessing vehicle damage from uploaded accident photos and providing instant repair cost estimates.
  4. Advanced and Predictive Analytics: Analyzing driving behavior from telematics data to predict risk levels and adjust premiums accordingly.
  5. Data Entry and Classification: Extracting and categorizing information from accident reports, policy documents, and customer communications.

Telematics stands out as the most prominent technological element, enabling product innovations like usage-based insurance. The approximately 200 active insurtech companies in the auto sector are also leveraging:

  • IoT and other sensors that can detect crashes immediately and monitor driver conditions.
  • Enhanced road data for better localized risk assessment.
  • New data-driven products for the sharing economy and usage-based insurance models.

Despite this progress, challenges remain, Gallagher Re noted. Auto insurance has become heavily commoditized, requiring truly innovative solutions to stand out. The industry must also balance the benefits of data granularity with the risk of creating an accessibility gap through “hyperfixation” of risk that could make insurance unaffordable for some drivers, the report said.

View the full Q1 report here. &

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

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