Definition:Insurance contract: Difference between revisions
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📋 '''Insurance contract''' is |
📋 '''Insurance contract''' is defined under [[Definition:IFRS17 | IFRS17]] as a contract in which one party (the [[Definition:Insurance carrier | insurer]]) accepts significant [[Definition:Insurance risk | insurance risk]] from another party (the [[Definition:Policyholder | policyholder]]) by agreeing to compensate the policyholder if a specified uncertain future event adversely affects them. This definition is broader than many people assume — it captures not only traditional [[Definition:Property insurance | property]] and [[Definition:Life insurance | life]] policies but also certain [[Definition:Warranty | warranty]] products, financial guarantee contracts, and [[Definition:Reinsurance | reinsurance]] arrangements, provided they transfer significant insurance risk. The critical test is whether there is a scenario, however unlikely, in which the insurer could pay significantly more than it would if the insured event did not occur. |
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⚙️ Classifying a contract as an insurance contract under IFRS17 triggers a cascade of measurement, presentation, and disclosure requirements. The insurer must group the contract with others of similar [[Definition:Risk | risk]] and inception date, select the appropriate measurement model — the [[Definition:Building Block Approach (BBA) | Building Block Approach]], the [[Definition:Premium Allocation Approach (PAA) | Premium Allocation Approach]], or the [[Definition:Variable Fee Approach (VFA) | Variable Fee Approach]] — and track [[Definition:Fulfilment cash flows | fulfilment cash flows]], a [[Definition:Risk adjustment | risk adjustment]], and, where relevant, a [[Definition:Contractual Service Margin (CSM) | Contractual Service Margin]] through each reporting period. Contracts that bundle investment or service components may need to be separated or, if not separated, measured in their entirety under the IFRS17 framework, which differs markedly from how such contracts were treated under earlier standards. |
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⚙️ The contract is typically documented in a [[Definition:Policy | policy]] that comprises several layers: [[Definition:Declarations page | declarations]] identifying the parties and covered interests, an [[Definition:Insuring agreement | insuring agreement]] stating the scope of coverage, [[Definition:Condition | conditions]] imposing duties on both sides, [[Definition:Exclusion | exclusions]] carving out certain perils or losses, and any [[Definition:Endorsement | endorsements]] modifying standard terms. Formation requires an offer (usually the [[Definition:Application | application]]), acceptance by the [[Definition:Underwriter | underwriter]], [[Definition:Consideration | consideration]] in the form of premium, and [[Definition:Legal capacity | legal capacity]] of the parties. In many jurisdictions, the contract is treated as a contract of [[Definition:Adhesion | adhesion]] — drafted by the insurer and offered on a take-it-or-leave-it basis — which courts interpret by construing ambiguities against the drafter under the [[Definition:Contra proferentem | contra proferentem]] doctrine. |
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💡 The precise boundary of what constitutes an insurance contract matters enormously in practice. A product development team launching a new parametric [[Definition:Catastrophe | catastrophe]] offering, for example, must confirm that the trigger structure transfers significant insurance risk; otherwise the contract may fall under a different accounting standard entirely, changing how [[Definition:Premium | premiums]] and [[Definition:Claims | claims]] appear in the financials. Similarly, [[Definition:Insurtech | insurtech]] platforms that embed coverage into third-party products need to determine which entity in the value chain has actually issued the insurance contract, because that entity bears the IFRS17 reporting obligation. |
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💡 Precision in the insurance contract's language has enormous downstream consequences. A single ambiguous word in an [[Definition:Exclusion | exclusion]] clause can generate years of [[Definition:Insurance coverage litigation | coverage litigation]] and millions of dollars in disputed [[Definition:Claims | claims]]. Regulators review and approve [[Definition:Policy form | policy forms]] to protect [[Definition:Consumer protection | consumers]], while [[Definition:Reinsurer | reinsurers]] scrutinize the underlying contract terms before agreeing to assume risk. The introduction of [[Definition:IFRS 17 | IFRS 17]] has further elevated the contract's significance, since the accounting standard defines the boundaries of an insurance contract for measurement and [[Definition:Revenue recognition | revenue recognition]] purposes. Whether negotiated on a [[Definition:Manuscript policy | manuscript]] basis for a complex commercial risk or issued as a standard personal-lines form, the insurance contract is the instrument through which promises become enforceable obligations. |
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'''Related concepts''' |
'''Related concepts:''' |
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* [[Definition: |
* [[Definition:IFRS17]] |
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* [[Definition:Insurance risk]] |
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* [[Definition:Policyholder]] |
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* [[Definition: |
* [[Definition:Reinsurance]] |
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* [[Definition:Building Block Approach (BBA)]] |
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* [[Definition:Premium Allocation Approach (PAA)]] |
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Latest revision as of 22:16, 10 March 2026
📋 Insurance contract is defined under IFRS17 as a contract in which one party (the insurer) accepts significant insurance risk from another party (the policyholder) by agreeing to compensate the policyholder if a specified uncertain future event adversely affects them. This definition is broader than many people assume — it captures not only traditional property and life policies but also certain warranty products, financial guarantee contracts, and reinsurance arrangements, provided they transfer significant insurance risk. The critical test is whether there is a scenario, however unlikely, in which the insurer could pay significantly more than it would if the insured event did not occur.
⚙️ Classifying a contract as an insurance contract under IFRS17 triggers a cascade of measurement, presentation, and disclosure requirements. The insurer must group the contract with others of similar risk and inception date, select the appropriate measurement model — the Building Block Approach, the Premium Allocation Approach, or the Variable Fee Approach — and track fulfilment cash flows, a risk adjustment, and, where relevant, a Contractual Service Margin through each reporting period. Contracts that bundle investment or service components may need to be separated or, if not separated, measured in their entirety under the IFRS17 framework, which differs markedly from how such contracts were treated under earlier standards.
💡 The precise boundary of what constitutes an insurance contract matters enormously in practice. A product development team launching a new parametric catastrophe offering, for example, must confirm that the trigger structure transfers significant insurance risk; otherwise the contract may fall under a different accounting standard entirely, changing how premiums and claims appear in the financials. Similarly, insurtech platforms that embed coverage into third-party products need to determine which entity in the value chain has actually issued the insurance contract, because that entity bears the IFRS17 reporting obligation.
Related concepts: