Claims Administration Intelligence Report 2026
The latest trends reshaping claims administration in France
For organisations managing complex claims programmes, the operating environment is changing rapidly.
Rising claim severity, climate volatility, evolving regulation, fraud risk, and increasing stakeholder expectations are reshaping how claims programmes are managed, governed, and measured.
The Claims Administration Intelligence Report 2026 explores the trends, risks, and operational shifts defining the future of claims administration across Europe.

Chapter 1: Claims Trends
What’s inside
Drawing on general market statistics and Sedgwick sourced claims data – 2.3 million losses received, Europe-wide, from 2020 to date – this report examines in depth the pressure points in claims administration, market evolution, and the wider implications for large organisations managing complex, high-value programmes.
Explore some of the trends impacting claims:
- 01
- Why claim severity – not frequency – is now the biggest cost driver across liability, motor, property, and bodily injury claims.
- 02
- How climate volatility, AI-enabled fraud, and rising litigation complexity are increasing operational and financial pressure on organisations.
- 03
- What evolving regulation, governance expectations, and outsourcing standards mean for claims administration in 2026 and beyond.
- 04
- How leading organisations are using data, intelligent automation, and specialist expertise to improve claims outcomes while protecting customer trust.
Coming soon
Further chapters will explore:
- Legislation and regulation – current and future impact on claim governance, including TPA provider operating standards
- Industry sector specifics spanning affinity, utilities, transportation and motor, telecoms

AI should not replace human connection. Value now lies not in processing claims, but in the quality of support delivered when it matters most. In a more regulated, demanding landscape, striking that balance is a key competitive edge.”


When it comes to property damage repair, the least expensive pound or euro is the one spent before the loss occurs. The second most cost-effective is the one spent within the first 24 hours. Everything else costs more.”
