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Latest revision as of 22:46, 12 March 2026

Did you know?

📍 Exhaustion point is the precise dollar threshold at which a lower layer of insurance or reinsurance coverage has been fully consumed by paid claims, triggering the next layer's obligation to respond. In a layered insurance program, each tier of coverage has a defined limit; when cumulative losses reach that limit, the layer is said to be "exhausted." The exhaustion point of one layer is, by design, the attachment point of the layer immediately above it, creating the seamless vertical structure that underpins large commercial and reinsurance programs.

🔄 Determining when exhaustion has actually occurred is more nuanced than it might appear. Disputes frequently arise over whether defense costs erode the underlying limit (as in many professional liability policies written on a duty-to-defend or burning limits basis) or sit outside the limit calculation. The timing of loss payments versus reserves can also complicate matters: some excess insurers require actual payment — not merely reserving — before acknowledging exhaustion. These technical questions are often addressed in the policy's other insurance and exhaustion provisions, but ambiguity in drafting has generated substantial coverage litigation over the years.

📐 For actuaries, underwriters, and risk managers, modeling the probability that losses will reach the exhaustion point of each successive layer is central to program design and pricing. If a layer is priced too cheaply because exhaustion was deemed unlikely, a single severe loss event or adverse trend can trigger unexpected recoveries that cascade through the tower. Reinsurers scrutinize exhaustion assumptions carefully during treaty negotiations, and brokers structuring towers must ensure that the terms governing exhaustion are consistent across all layers to avoid gaps or overlaps in coverage.

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