Definition:Demands and needs statement
📋 Demands and needs statement is a regulatory disclosure used primarily in European insurance markets, requiring an intermediary or insurer to document the customer's specific insurance requirements and demonstrate that the product recommended aligns with those requirements. The concept is rooted in the Insurance Distribution Directive (IDD), which mandates that any distribution activity within the European Economic Area include a clear assessment of the customer's demands (the type of coverage sought) and needs (the particular circumstances shaping that request) before a policy is sold. While the IDD established the most formalized version, analogous obligations exist in other jurisdictions — the UK's Financial Conduct Authority imposes similar suitability and appropriateness standards under its conduct rules.
⚙️ In practice, the demands and needs assessment is conducted early in the sales or advisory process. A broker or agent gathers information about the customer's situation — the nature of the risk, the level of coverage desired, budget constraints, and any specific exclusions or features that matter — and records this analysis. The resulting statement is then provided to the customer, typically before or at the point of sale, confirming that the product being offered is consistent with what was identified. For non-advised sales (where the customer selects a product without a personal recommendation), the statement tends to be more concise, establishing that the product fits the customer's stated demands. For advised sales, the documentation is more detailed, explaining why a specific product was recommended over alternatives. The process may be paper-based in traditional channels but is increasingly embedded in digital distribution platforms, where logic-driven questionnaires auto-generate the statement based on customer inputs.
🛡️ Beyond regulatory compliance, the demands and needs statement serves a practical protective function for both the customer and the distributor. For the customer, it creates a written record confirming that their requirements were heard and addressed, providing a basis for complaint or redress if the product later proves unsuitable. For the intermediary or insurer, it establishes an audit trail demonstrating adherence to conduct obligations — a valuable defense if a sale is later challenged by a regulator or ombudsman. The discipline of formally documenting demands and needs has also pushed distributors toward more structured sales processes, reducing the risk of mis-selling in complex lines such as payment protection or investment-linked policies, where past misconduct prompted many of the regulatory reforms that now require these statements.
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