Underwriting Judgment Is the Core Skill (and the Bottleneck)
Your judgment stays yours. Your throughput triples.
MGA profit lives in underwriting judgment—your underwriters price risk better than competitors because they see patterns. But judgment is serial. A single underwriter can review 8-12 submissions per day, max. Scale requires hiring, training, and accepting longer ramp times. Judgment doesn't clone.
The moat is judgment capacity, not judgment quality.
Where capacity bleeds today
The bottlenecks AI removes
Loss Run Reading Still Demands Human Attention
Loss runs hide signals: prior carriers, claim frequency trends, reserve creep, coverage gaps that were claimed against. Human underwriters catch nuance (e.g., a spike in fire claims year-over-year suggests process change or new facility). Reading 5 years of loss history manually takes 15-20 minutes per submission.
Construction and Occupancy Context Matters
Construction class changes. Tenant mix shifts. Occupancy concentration drives risk pricing. Your underwriter knows this intuitively, but new data arrives late (ACORD forms lag inspection reports). Context gets fragmented across email, observations, and prior submissions.
AI underwriting for MGAs: surface blind spots, not just score risks
AI ingests loss run data, construction records, occupancy changes, claim history, and prior quotes in parallel. It flags anomalies faster than serial reading: claim frequency vs. industry benchmark, coverage mismatches, hidden accumulation risk. It highlights exceptions, not conclusions. Human underwriter makes the call with fuller context.
The Win: More Risk Can Be Processed Without Hiring
Your three underwriters can now review 24-30 submissions per day instead of 8-12, with better odds on selection accuracy. The AI handles signal assembly; the underwriter handles decision. You process 3x volume with the same underwriting team. Margin improves because selection improves.
3x throughput plus accuracy gains compound into profitability.
| Dimension | Before AI | After AI |
|---|---|---|
| Submissions per Underwriter per Day | 8-12 | 24-30 (3x) |
| Loss Run Analysis Time | 15-20 min (manual reading) | 2-3 min (AI signal + review) |
| Risk Signal Completeness | 70% (context scattered) | 95% (integrated context) |
| Selection Accuracy | Underwriter-dependent | 85%+ flagging precision |
| Underwriting Team Growth | 1 new hire per 25% volume growth | No new hire needed for 3x volume |
$6M-8M annual margin expansion for a $100M premium MGA without adding headcount.
Where this sits in the $84B pool
$30.8B of MGA revenue is AI-compressible. Each bar is an activity — width is revenue share, height is operating margin. This workflow sits where the bar lands. Click any other to explore it.
Co-operate, not consult
We take position in the workflows we automate.
MGA margin sits in intake velocity, underwriting triage, and claims throughput. We run these — not map them. Our economics are equity in the margin you recover, not retainer on the analysis.
Talk to a principalThe full $84B pool
See where the MGA margin moves.
Map every activity — width is revenue share, height is operating margin. Click any bar to explore that workflow.
View the profit poolDoes AI risk scoring replace MGA underwriter judgment or enhance it?
Enhance, only. Moative surfaces risk signals: loss trends, coverage gaps, occupancy changes. Your underwriter retains 100% of the decision authority. AI is a co-worker that reads faster, not a decision automation system.
How does AI flag hidden risk patterns in loss run data?
AI ingests 5 years of loss history, extracts claim frequency, reserve trends, reopens, and severity outliers. It benchmarks against industry and peer cohorts. It flags anomalies like 'claim frequency 3x industry' or 'coverage X never claimed before but exposed here.'
What's the typical improvement in MGA loss ratios after deploying AI underwriting augmentation?
Client MGAs see 15-25% improvement in loss ratio selectivity because they reject or re-price more of the tail risk that humans weren't catching in high-volume days.