YMCA Management Webinar Series: The Why’s of the Insurance Marketplace
By Alliant Property & Casualty
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July 31, 2025
Welcome to the YMCA Management Webinar Series.
The YMCA Management Webinar Series is designed to serve as a resource for individual YMCAs and provide a forum for meaningful conversations on risk management and insurance topics impacting the movement.
This session focuses on the underlying forces shaping today’s insurance marketplace and why coverage has become more expensive, more complex and more limited for YMCAs. The discussion explores macroeconomic pressures, carrier behavior and YMCA-specific factors that influence pricing, capacity and renewal outcomes. Participants also examine common misconceptions, what associations can control and what market signals to watch moving forward.
Agenda
Why the insurance marketplace is challenging today.
Insurance costs are being driven by a combination of economic, legal and industry-wide forces that extend far beyond any individual YMCA.
Key macro drivers include:
Rising reinsurance costs driven by a shrinking pool of global reinsurers.
Catastrophic weather events that aggregate losses across personal and commercial insurance.
Inflation in labor, construction materials, vehicles and technology.
Social inflation, including higher jury verdicts and shifting attitudes toward litigation.
Litigation funding and third-party investment in lawsuits.
Supply chain disruption and labor shortages that extend claim duration.
Together, these pressures increase claim severity and volatility, which ultimately flows through to premiums.
Carriers are responding to these pressures by tightening underwriting standards and reducing risk exposure.
Common carrier responses include:
Reduced capacity and fewer carriers willing to participate in large programs.
Stricter underwriting guidelines and narrower appetite.
Higher deductibles and retentions.
Pullback from higher-risk sectors including childcare, camps and habitation exposures.
Increased scrutiny of loss history and controls.
In the YMCA space, these dynamics are most visible in umbrella and excess liability, where limit availability has declined and pricing per layer has increased significantly.
At the association level, several factors can amplify market pressure.
Common YMCA drivers include:
Outdated property and fleet valuations that create premium spikes when corrected.
Higher liability claim reserves and reduced flexibility in settlement negotiation.
Exposure growth through childcare, aquatics, fleet expansion and payroll increases.
Limited carrier competition compared to prior years.
Even well-run, low-loss associations are experiencing increases due to broader market forces.
Several long-held beliefs about insurance no longer reflect today’s reality.
Misconception: “We had no claims, so our rates should not increase.”
Reality: Insurance pricing reflects shared risk across the market. Loss-free does not mean risk-free.
Misconception: “We can just shop the market.”
Reality: The YMCA carrier pool is smaller than it was 10 to 15 years ago. Timing, strategy and underwriter relationships matter more than broad shopping.
Reality: Relationships help but do not override actuarial and profitability requirements.
Misconception: “New loss control measures should reduce premiums immediately.”
Reality: In today’s market, many controls are required simply to remain eligible. Meaningful pricing impact often takes time and consistency.
Market conditions vary by coverage line.
Property Market conditions are driven by catastrophe modeling, valuation increases and weather exposure. Flood coverage may be required depending on location.
Auto Frequency and severity are increasing due to distracted driving and higher repair costs.
General Liability Claims that once resolved quickly now escalate due to social inflation and increased scrutiny of youth-serving organizations.
Umbrella and Excess Capacity is limited and pricing per layer has increased sharply.
Workers’ Compensation Conditions are generally stable with modest decreases in some states, though medical inflation remains a concern.
Cyber Increased controls and better risk management have improved pricing and availability.
Despite market pressures, associations retain meaningful influence over outcomes.
Key levers include:
Starting renewal planning earlier, ideally 150 to 180 days out.
Providing clean, current and complete data.
Telling a clear story about operations, growth and controls.
Evaluating deductible and retention strategies.
Investing in loss control and documenting practices.
Managing claims proactively and learning from near misses.
Ensuring property and fleet valuations reflect current replacement costs.
Exploring alternative risk solutions where appropriate.
Strong preparation reduces uncertainty, which underwriters consistently reward.
Insurance markets no longer move in unison. Property, liability, auto, workers’ compensation and cyber each follow different cycles.
Signals to monitor include:
Capital inflows or withdrawals in specific lines.
Reinsurance stability and competition.
Legislative activity related to litigation funding.
Loss performance trends within the YMCA movement.
Technological advances in risk management and underwriting.
Improved loss performance and sustained controls are key to benefiting when markets soften.
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Key Takeaways
Insurance costs are driven by broad economic, legal and industry forces.
Carrier capacity is shrinking and underwriting is more selective.
YMCA exposures and valuations play a meaningful role in outcomes.
Many old assumptions about insurance no longer apply.
Early planning, strong data and loss control matter more than ever.
Associations that control factors within their power can best position themselves for renewal.
This document is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, accounting, insurance, brokerage, risk management, or other professional advice. You should consult your own legal counsel or other qualified professional advisors regarding your specific circumstances, and receipt of this document does not create any client, advisory, fiduciary, brokerage, or other professional relationship with Alliant Insurance Services, Inc. This document is provided “as is” without warranty of any kind, and Alliant Insurance Services, Inc. disclaims any liability for any loss or damage arising out of or relating to reliance on this document.