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March/April 2026  Volume 37, Number 2        
 

contemplative executive

Large Liability Claims Push Companies to Reevaluate Limits

The liability landscape has shifted dramatically over the past decade, and 2026 is proving no exception. As nuclear verdicts grow larger and social inflation continues to accelerate claim severity, many businesses are taking a hard look at whether their current liability limits are still adequate. What once felt like generous protection can now be exhausted by a single catastrophic event — a reality that is reshaping how companies structure their liability programs.

Nuclear Verdicts Are Redefining Severity

The rise of nuclear verdicts — jury awards exceeding $10 million — has become one of the most disruptive forces in the liability market. These verdicts are no longer confined to a handful of plaintiff friendly jurisdictions; they are appearing across the country and across industries. Claims involving transportation, construction, hospitality, healthcare, and product liability have all seen awards reach levels that would have been unthinkable a decade ago. Several factors are driving this trend:

  • Aggressive plaintiff strategies supported by sophisticated litigation funding
  • Juror sentiment increasingly sympathetic to plaintiffs and skeptical of corporations
  • Social inflation, which amplifies the perceived value of damages
  • Expanding theories of liability, including negligent hiring, negligent supervision, and corporate responsibility claims

For businesses, the message is clear: the severity of liability claims is rising faster than traditional insurance structures were designed to handle.

Excess Liability Limits Under Pressure

As verdicts grow larger, excess liability layers are being pierced more frequently. Claims that once touched only the primary layer are now reaching the umbrella and even the higher excess towers. This has prompted many companies to reassess whether their limits — often unchanged for years — still reflect the realities of modern litigation.

At the same time, excess liability markets remain cautious. Carriers are tightening underwriting standards, reducing available capacity, and increasing attachment points. Industries with heavy auto exposure, significant public interaction, or operations in litigious jurisdictions face the greatest scrutiny.

The combination of rising severity and constrained capacity has created a challenging environment for buyers seeking to build or maintain large towers of excess coverage.

Businesses Are Reassessing Their Limits

In response to these trends, companies are taking a more strategic approach to evaluating liability limits. Many are conducting:

  • Limit adequacy studies, which model potential loss scenarios
  • Benchmarking analyses, comparing limits to peers in their industry
  • Jurisdictional reviews, assessing exposure in high risk venues
  • Contractual risk assessments, ensuring indemnification and hold harmless agreements are aligned with insurance structures

Boards and executive teams are increasingly involved in these discussions, recognizing that liability claims can pose existential financial risk.

Risk Management Matters More Than Ever

While purchasing higher limits is one response, insurers are also emphasizing the importance of strong risk management practices. Businesses that can demonstrate robust safety programs, documented training, disciplined hiring practices, and proactive claims management are better positioned to secure favorable terms.

For companies with fleet exposure, telematics and driver monitoring have become essential tools. For those in construction or manufacturing, job site safety protocols and subcontractor controls are under heightened scrutiny. Across all industries, documentation — and the ability to produce it quickly — is becoming a critical differentiator.

The Bottom Line

Large liability claims are reshaping the insurance landscape, pushing businesses to reevaluate whether their current limits are sufficient in an era of nuclear verdicts and social inflation. As severity trends continue to rise, companies that proactively assess their exposures, strengthen their risk controls, and strategically structure their liability programs will be best positioned to navigate the evolving environment.

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In this issue:

This Just In ... Builder’s Risk and Construction Insurance Face Supply Chain and Labor Pressures

Commercial Insurance Outlook 2026: Property Finds Its Footing, Casualty Splits, Auto Deteriorates

Cyber Insurance Market Stabilizes as Security Controls Improve

Large Liability Claims Push Companies to Reevaluate Limits

What Underwriters Look for in Cyber Submissions

 

 


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