
Across personal auto, workers' compensation, commercial auto, and homeowners, P&C carriers are rewriting their products faster than at any point in the past decade — and the clearest signal isn't market commentary, it's the filings themselves. ZestyAI used ZORRO Discover™ to review more than 2 million SERFF filings, with a deep dive into 1,700+ homeowners filings across 58 carriers and $51B in premium in five severe convective storm states. The findings show carriers redesigning coverage faster than most teams can track, regulators tightening expectations alongside, and — counterintuitively — smaller carriers leading adoption of the most material changes.
About this analysis. Insights are drawn from Zorro Discover, an AI agent purpose-built for insurance-specific research. Zorro ingests every public P&C filing submitted over the past decade (2M+ filings, 200M+ pages), preserves table structure during processing, and grounds every response in source filings. The homeowners deep dive covered Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, Ohio, and North Carolina from 2023 to 2025. Presented by Stephanie Kuczynski, Director of Risk Analytics at ZestyAI (formerly Progressive, American Integrity, and The Hartford).
Prefer to watch instead? Access the full on-demand session → — full state-by-state data, tier-by-tier breakdowns, and live Q&A.
2025 personal auto filings show a clear divergence. Most filings remain mechanical, but a meaningful subset is layering telematics signals, vehicle feature factors, and combined rating structures into a single filing rather than tweaking one variable at a time. COVID is still in the data — many carriers continue to exclude 2020 entirely or reset older years to a post-pandemic baseline before trending forward. Meanwhile, regulators are raising the proof bar: model factors increasingly need direct statistical support to be approved.
The 2026 advantage will go to carriers that can move fast and defend each change clearly.
In workers' compensation, the loss cost multiplier (LCM) is no longer a tuning knob — it's become the primary economic and structural control surface, subject to continuous regulatory oversight. Carriers are building risk segmentation directly into LCM structure rather than layering it on through schedule credits, and competitive pressure now shows up as surgical, state-level LCM moves rather than broad national adjustments.
The market is splitting. Some commercial auto programs decline rideshare exposure outright; others continue to write it but rate it through negotiated, individually set prices that diverge sharply between states. A handful of filings have also begun referencing autonomous and driver-assist use at the rule level — early intent signals, even where pricing isn't yet defined.
This is where the redesign is most visible. The most striking finding: smaller Tier 4 carriers — regional mutuals, farm bureaus, and specialty writers — are leading adoption of percentage deductibles, ACV roof endorsements, and cosmetic damage exclusions, while Tier 1 nationals tend to wait and follow. Tier 4 carriers can't spread severe convective storm exposure across geographies or perils, so they have to manage it surgically.
The financial stakes are real. A single cosmetic damage exclusion can remove 15–25% of hail claim dollars from a carrier's books, and ACV settlement can shift 30–60% of roof replacement cost back to the insured. State-level patterns diverge as much as the carrier strategies do — Texas is the most restrictive market across nearly every endorsement, while North Carolina has barely adopted cosmetic damage exclusions at all because its rating bureau is still standardizing the language.
Regulators in states like Colorado and Texas now require actuarial parity: proof that premium credits given for these endorsements match the loss reductions they're claimed to produce.
Across every line, the same pattern emerges: better data is producing faster product moves, and regulators are responding with tighter expectations for how that complexity is supported and explained. The carriers that win 2026 will be the ones that can see competitor filing moves in days rather than weeks, defend each change with traceable evidence, and translate state-specific patterns into targeted product decisions. Filings have become both the strategy document and the audit trail.
The Hidden Redesign of P&C Insurance: What 2 Million Filings Reveal About 2026 Product Strategy →
The on-demand session goes deeper on the homeowners study with full tier and state breakdowns, plus live Q&A on anti-matching, solar panel exposure, ACV labor depreciation, lendability under Fannie/Freddie guidelines, and more.
Access the on-demand recording — or request a trial of Zorro Discover to run your own filings analysis on any line, state, or carrier set.