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💰 Allocated loss adjustment expense (ALAE) is the category of loss adjustment expense that can be attributed directly to the investigation, defense, and settlement of a specific claim. In insurance accounting and reserving, ALAE stands in contrast to unallocated loss adjustment expense (ULAE), which covers overhead costs — salaries of in-house claims staff, office rent, technology systems — that support the claims function broadly but cannot be traced to any single file. Typical ALAE items include outside legal fees, expert witness costs, independent adjuster fees, court costs, and medical examination expenses incurred in connection with one identifiable claim.
📂 From an operational standpoint, claims adjusters and claims managers track ALAE on a file-by-file basis, recording each expenditure against the specific claim number it supports. This granularity feeds into the insurer's case reserves and ultimately into the IBNR estimates produced by actuaries. In reinsurance agreements, whether ALAE is included inside or outside the reinsurance limit — often referred to as "ALAE in addition" versus "ALAE included" — materially affects recoveries and is a key negotiation point. Excess-of-loss treaties, in particular, must define the treatment of ALAE with precision, because defense costs on complex liability claims can rival or exceed the indemnity payment itself.
📊 Accurate tracking and forecasting of ALAE is essential to an insurer's financial health. Underestimating these expenses leads to reserve deficiencies that surface during reserve development reviews, eroding reported profitability and potentially triggering regulatory concern about solvency. In litigious lines such as medical malpractice, D&O, and general liability, ALAE can represent a significant proportion of total incurred costs. Insurers that invest in early resolution strategies, alternative dispute resolution, and litigation management protocols often do so with an explicit goal of controlling ALAE — recognizing that defense dollars spent wisely can reduce total claim cost, while unmanaged legal spending can quietly consume underwriting profits.
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