Definition:Delegated underwriting authority (DUA): Difference between revisions
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🔑 '''Delegated underwriting authority (DUA)''' is a formal arrangement in which an insurance or reinsurance carrier grants an external party — typically a managing general agent, coverholder, or program administrator — the power to underwrite risks and bind policies on the carrier's behalf. The delegation is governed by a written agreement that precisely defines which classes of business, coverage limits, territories, and pricing guidelines the delegate may operate within. It is one of the most consequential decisions a carrier makes, because the delegate's actions create direct financial obligations on the carrier's balance sheet. |
🔑 '''Delegated underwriting authority (DUA)''' is a formal arrangement in which an [[Definition:Insurance carrier | insurance]] or [[Definition:Reinsurance | reinsurance]] carrier grants an external party — typically a [[Definition:Managing general agent (MGA) | managing general agent]], [[Definition:Coverholder | coverholder]], or [[Definition:Program administrator | program administrator]] — the power to underwrite [[Definition:Risk | risks]] and [[Definition:Binding authority | bind]] policies on the carrier's behalf. The delegation is governed by a written agreement that precisely defines which [[Definition:Class of business | classes of business]], [[Definition:Coverage limit | coverage limits]], territories, and [[Definition:Underwriting guideline | pricing guidelines]] the delegate may operate within. It is one of the most consequential decisions a carrier makes, because the delegate's actions create direct financial obligations on the carrier's [[Definition:Balance sheet | balance sheet]]. |
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🔍 Carriers monitor delegated authority through a combination of pre-bind controls and post-bind auditing. Before granting authority, they perform due diligence on the delegate's track record, systems, and staff qualifications. Once the arrangement is live, regular bordereaux reporting gives the carrier visibility into every policy written, while periodic audits and claims reviews ensure the delegate stays within agreed parameters. If performance deteriorates or guidelines are breached, the carrier can restrict or revoke the authority. |
🔍 Carriers monitor delegated authority through a combination of pre-bind controls and post-bind auditing. Before granting authority, they perform [[Definition:Due diligence | due diligence]] on the delegate's track record, systems, and staff qualifications. Once the arrangement is live, regular [[Definition:Bordereaux | bordereaux]] reporting gives the carrier visibility into every policy written, while periodic audits and [[Definition:Claims review | claims reviews]] ensure the delegate stays within agreed parameters. If performance deteriorates or guidelines are breached, the carrier can restrict or revoke the authority. |
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📊 Delegated authority has reshaped how insurance reaches the market. It allows carriers to tap specialized expertise and local distribution without establishing their own offices in every territory, while delegates gain access to rated paper and balance-sheet capacity they could not provide alone. For regulators and rating agencies, the quality of a carrier's delegated-authority oversight is a key indicator of enterprise risk management maturity, making robust governance frameworks essential for any company that relies on this model at scale. |
📊 Delegated authority has reshaped how insurance reaches the market. It allows carriers to tap specialized expertise and local distribution without establishing their own offices in every territory, while delegates gain access to [[Definition:Rated paper | rated paper]] and balance-sheet [[Definition:Capacity provider | capacity]] they could not provide alone. For regulators and [[Definition:Rating agency | rating agencies]], the quality of a carrier's delegated-authority oversight is a key indicator of [[Definition:Enterprise risk management | enterprise risk management]] maturity, making robust governance frameworks essential for any company that relies on this model at scale. |
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'''Related concepts''' |
'''Related concepts''' |
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Latest revision as of 00:00, 10 March 2026
🔑 Delegated underwriting authority (DUA) is a formal arrangement in which an insurance or reinsurance carrier grants an external party — typically a managing general agent, coverholder, or program administrator — the power to underwrite risks and bind policies on the carrier's behalf. The delegation is governed by a written agreement that precisely defines which classes of business, coverage limits, territories, and pricing guidelines the delegate may operate within. It is one of the most consequential decisions a carrier makes, because the delegate's actions create direct financial obligations on the carrier's balance sheet.
🔍 Carriers monitor delegated authority through a combination of pre-bind controls and post-bind auditing. Before granting authority, they perform due diligence on the delegate's track record, systems, and staff qualifications. Once the arrangement is live, regular bordereaux reporting gives the carrier visibility into every policy written, while periodic audits and claims reviews ensure the delegate stays within agreed parameters. If performance deteriorates or guidelines are breached, the carrier can restrict or revoke the authority.
📊 Delegated authority has reshaped how insurance reaches the market. It allows carriers to tap specialized expertise and local distribution without establishing their own offices in every territory, while delegates gain access to rated paper and balance-sheet capacity they could not provide alone. For regulators and rating agencies, the quality of a carrier's delegated-authority oversight is a key indicator of enterprise risk management maturity, making robust governance frameworks essential for any company that relies on this model at scale.
Related concepts