Health and Safety Lead Global D&O Risk Survey

Health and safety concerns remain the top risk priority for corporate leaders globally in 2025, while social risks have seen a dramatic rise over five years, according to WTW’s latest Global Directors’ and Officers’ Survey Report.
Produced in collaboration with Clyde & Co, the report draws on insights from senior executives and risk managers across the globe, offering a comprehensive view of the evolving governance challenges facing today’s business leaders.
“The latest survey results underscore the diverse challenges directors and officers face today, highlighting how fraught the landscape has become,” stated Angus Duncan, global D&O coverage specialist at Willis. “Despite increasing concerns over litigation risks, cost remains the dominant driver for D&O insurance purchasing decisions. This trend persists even as regulatory scrutiny and shareholder activism increase global liability exposures.
Among health and safety risks, physical workplace risks were cited as the most important by 43% of respondents, followed by employee mental health and wellbeing consequences stemming from work (28%) and from personal matters (12%), the survey found. While still the highest ranked concern overall, health and safety concerns have slightly decreased from last year’s ranking (down 4% to 80%).
By industry, health and safety ranked No. 1 in all sectors, except finance and insurance, where it ranked sixth. The top risks within the finance and insurance sector were data loss, regulatory breach and cyber attack risks, the survey found.
Meanwhile, social risks have surged dramatically in importance over a five-year period, the survey found. Human rights concerns within business operations have experienced a remarkable trajectory, rising from just 23% of respondents considering it a very or extremely important concern in 2021 to 62% in 2025. This issue now ranks among the top seven risks in several regions, WTW noted.
Similarly, supplier business practices have climbed significantly in the risk hierarchy, with concern levels more than doubling to 59% in 2025 from 27% in 2021. This upward trend reflects growing recognition that integrating social risk considerations positions companies for sustainable growth and resilience in today’s evolving business landscape, according to the report.
Data loss and cyber risks continue to dominate boardroom conversations, with 77% of respondents indicating they are very important or extremely important. Artificial intelligence lags behind cyber risks (only 51% of respondents consider AI to be very or extremely important), but this may change in the future as new use cases and regulations develop, WTW noted.
Regulatory risk remains a persistent top concern as directors navigate an increasingly complex landscape of continuously introduced rules and regulations.
For the first time since 2018 civil litigation and third party claims were included among the top D&O risk concerns, with 63% of directors and officers surveyed considering these significant risks to their directors and officers, WTW reported.
Rounding off the top list of concerns was bribery and corruption. Concern about this risk is felt more in the largest companies – 81% of respondents in companies with a revenue over $5 billion ranked bribery and corruption as a very or extremely important concern, compared with 51% of responders in companies with revenue below $50 million, the survey found.
These evolving risks facing businesses create multiple challenges. “To avoid and reduce these risks, it is essential to have effective risk management strategies and appropriate systems and controls in place,” WTW emphasized.
View the full report here. &