Insurtech Funding Hits $60 Billion Milestone as AI Deals Dominate Despite Quarterly Decline

Property and casualty insurtech funding plummets while life and health surges in mixed Q2 results, Gallagher Re reports.
By: | August 15, 2025
building AI
Global insurtech funding reached a cumulative $60 billion since 2012 in the second quarter of 2025, even as quarterly funding declined 16.7% to $1.09 billion amid a stark divergence between insurance sectors, according to Gallagher Re’s Q2 2025 insurtech report.The second quarter revealed dramatically different funding trajectories across insurance lines, the report noted. Property and casualty insurtechs experienced a steep 68% decline in funding to $362.22 million, marking the lowest level since the first quarter of 2018. The average P&C deal size plummeted 66.7% to $6.35 million, the smallest since 2014.

In contrast, life and health insurtech funding nearly tripled quarter-over-quarter, surging to $728.47 million — the highest total since the second quarter of 2022. Four of the quarter’s largest deals went to L&H companies, including Gravie’s $144 million Series G and Bestow’s $120 million Series D, driving the category’s average deal size up to $26.02 million.

The U.S. captured 60.4% of global insurtech deals during the quarter, reaching a nine-year high, while Silicon Valley and New York accounted for nearly a quarter of all deals combined. Meanwhile, Asia saw only four insurtech deals, highlighting the geographic concentration of funding activity.

AI-Centered Companies Command Majority of Deals

Artificial intelligence-focused insurtech dominated the funding landscape, securing 57.1% of all Q2 deals and raising $582.72 million across 52 transactions, according to the report. This represents a continuation of the AI investment trend, with 42% of insurtech funding going to AI deals in the fourth quarter of 2024.

The concentration of AI investment reflects broader venture capital patterns, where just over half of all VC money in Q4 2024 went to AI-focused companies, the report said. However, the report notes that while $15 billion of the total $60 billion insurtech funding has targeted AI-related technologies, this may not be sufficient given the scale of AI investment elsewhere.

“While $60 billion represents substantial capital, it is worth putting it into some context and asking whether the insurance industry is investing sufficiently in innovation. This is especially urgent given the rise of artificial intelligence, where vast sums are now being deployed,” the report’s authors said. “According to a Stanford University study, a cumulative $1.6 trillion has been invested globally in AI since 2013 – including the value of all private investments, public offerings and M&A deals.”

Meanwhile, early-stage funding showed resilience despite overall quarterly declines, with early-stage insurtech deal sizes spiking 66.5% to $6.18 million. The increase was particularly pronounced in L&H, where early-stage funding surged 127.4% quarter-over-quarter, the report noted.

Property Insurance Insurtechs Navigate Rising Loss Environment

Property-focused insurtech represent a significant portion of the overall insurtech ecosystem, having raised an estimated $12.9 billion of the total $60 billion invested since 2012 across approximately 464 active companies, according to Gallagher Re, which focused on activity in this sector in the Q2 report. (The Q1 report focused on auto insurance insurtechs.)

During Q2 2025, property-focused insurtech raised $191.12 million in funding, though predominantly in smaller deal sizes with 20 of 33 deals raising $5 million or less, the report said.

The property insurance sector faces mounting challenges from escalating natural catastrophe losses, which have grown at an annualized 3.9% since 2010 and now regularly exceed $150 billion annually. The first half of 2025 marked the costliest year in property losses since 2011, with weather and climate events driving almost all losses in the U.S., Gallagher Re said.

Technology applications in property insurance are evolving beyond traditional approaches, with Internet of Things devices and sensors creating new data streams for risk assessment.

“This shift is hugely significant in property insurance. Through continuous monitoring of relevant conditions, and proactive risk management, the use of loT devices can help reduce property premiums and claims processing costs. IoT is transforming insurers from reactive claims payers to proactive risk-management partners,” the report said.

AI applications in property insurance have shown particular success in claims fraud detection, where AI-powered fraud engines can reduce false positives by up to 50% and boost real fraud detection by 20%. Machine learning, image recognition and automation emerge as the three AI tools with the most potential in property insurance, according to industry expert polling by Gallagher Re.

Obtain the full report here. &

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

More from Risk & Insurance