Insurance for architects and engineers (A&E) has become increasingly complex — and more expensive. Even firms with strong safety cultures and clean claim histories are seeing premiums rise year over year due to shifts in underwriting appetite, litigation trends, and project risk.
That said: while A&E premiums are increasing across the board, underwriting is still highly firm-specific. Two firms with similar revenue can see wildly different pricing depending on how insurers view their risk.
Below are the Top 5 drivers of insurance cost for architects and engineers, including what underwriters care about most and what you can do to control your premiums.
1) Project Type + Risk Profile
More than anything else, insurance carriers price the risk profile of your projects.
Architect and engineering exposures aren’t priced equally — even if your revenue is the same.
Examples of higher-risk project types that commonly increase premiums:
- Multifamily / condos (especially for-sale condominiums)
- Structural engineering and stamped design
- Retaining walls, pools, hillside work
- Public safety facilities (police/fire stations), schools
- High-rise or complex mixed-use construction
- Design-build delivery
- Renovations and tenant improvements (hidden conditions)
Underwriters evaluate:
- complexity and tolerance for error
- cost to fix a mistake if something fails
- probability of dispute between owner/GC/design team
- frequency of claims historically in that project segment
Bottom line: even one “risky” project category can raise the premium for your entire book of work.
What helps reduce costs:
- clearly documenting your project mix (percent breakdown)
- limiting exposure to high-risk segments
- separating high-risk work into separate entities or contracts (when appropriate)
2) Claims History (Frequency Matters More Than Size)
Most firms assume only “big claims” affect premium.
In reality, claim frequency is one of the strongest predictors of future pricing. Underwriters often react more to “how often” than “how large.”
Why frequency drives cost:
- repeated allegations suggest process issues
- small claims still cost the carrier legal fees
- frequent claims reduce underwriting confidence
Even these items can increase premium:
- demand letters
- disputes that trigger insurer involvement
- small “nuisance” payouts
- repeated project delay allegations
What helps reduce costs:
- improving documentation (meeting notes, RFI logs, approvals)
- tightening QA/QC processes
- training project managers on contract risk and reporting
3) Scope of Services + Contract Language
Insurance carriers don’t just insure your drawings — they insure your legal exposure.
A&E insurance costs rise sharply when a firm’s contract terms shift risk from other parties onto the design professional.
High-cost / high-risk contract issues include:
- contractual assumption of liability beyond negligence
- warranty or guarantee language (“fit for purpose,” “guarantee performance”)
- indemnification clauses that are too broad
- agreeing to be responsible for means & methods
- agreeing to jobsite safety responsibility
- signing third-party agreements without review
Many claims originate from:
- poorly worded scope language
- undocumented change orders
- “informal” advice given without contract clarity
What helps reduce costs:
- having standardized contracts (AIA, EJCDC, or attorney-reviewed templates)
- contract review procedure for every project above a threshold
- avoiding warranty language
- clearly stating responsibilities for contractor and owner
4) Revenue, Firm Size, and Professional Staff Mix
Revenue is part of the rating basis — but it’s not the full story. Underwriters also look at:
- number of licensed professionals
- staff-to-revenue ratio
- quality control bandwidth
- whether work is outsourced
- whether subconsultants are used and managed correctly
Common staffing factors that raise premium:
- rapid growth without process controls
- heavy outsourcing without risk transfer provisions
- insufficient oversight between senior PE/RA and junior staff
- reliance on independent contractors without documented review
Underwriters prefer:
- clear supervision models
- written QA/QC standards
- subconsultant insurance requirements
- repeatable workflows
What helps reduce costs:
- documenting roles/responsibilities
- showing underwriters your QA/QC program
- providing org chart with reviewer sign-off procedures
5) Coverage Structure: Limits, Retention, Retro Date, and Tail Exposure
A big driver of premium is how your policy is structured — not just the fact that you have one.
Key pricing levers:
- limits (e.g., $1M vs $2M vs $5M)
- deductible/retention
- retroactive date (how far back you’re covered)
- project-specific requirements
- extended reporting period (“tail”) needs
- claims-made vs occurrence differences
Many firms unknowingly drive their costs up by:
- purchasing higher limits than needed “just in case”
- carrying very low deductibles
- failing to maintain continuity (creating retro complications)
- not aligning limits with contract requirements (leading to expensive overbuying)
What helps reduce costs:
- aligning limits with project/contract needs
- increasing retention strategically
- maintaining continuous claims-made coverage
- reviewing retro date and continuity annually
Conclusion: A&E Premiums Are Driven by Underwriting Confidence
The best way to reduce insurance cost isn’t shopping every year. It’s building an insurance profile that underwriters trust.
At Strux Insurance, we help architects and engineers lower premiums by focusing on:
- accurate firm classification and service descriptions
- project mix presentation
- contract and scope risk review
- claims prevention practices
- optimized coverage design (limits, retention, retro dates)

