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How AI and data are shaping the insurance industry across the globe

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Artificial intelligence (AI) and data analytics are reshaping the global insurance landscape. While the potential of AI is universal, how it’s applied and the pace of adoption varies by region. In this article, we compare how insurers in China, Southeast Asia, the US, and Europe are leveraging AI to improve customer experience, empower sales forces, streamline operations, and respond to regulatory demands. Despite common trends, each region reflects a unique balance of opportunity, challenge, and readiness. 

A new era in global insurance

Digital transformation is no longer optional. Globally, insurers are under pressure to reduce inefficiencies, personalize offerings, and win customer trust. AI is proving critical in achieving all three. Yet regulatory environments, legacy systems, distribution models, and consumer behavior differ dramatically across regions, impacting how AI is deployed and scaled. To stay competitive, insurers must adapt their approach to AI to fit the realities of each local market while maintaining a clear global strategy.

China: A tech-driven, ecosystem-led model

Highlights: 

  • Deep integration of AI in customer-facing and back-end operations  

  • Powerful ecosystems (e.g., Ping An, ZhongAn, Alibaba) dominate distribution 

  • Strong government support for AI innovation  

Chinese insurers operate in one of the most digitized environments worldwide. AI is embedded across the value chain, from underwriting and pricing to claims and customer service. Companies like Ping An use health and behavioral data to personalize policies in real time, while ZhongAn settles claims in minutes using automated AI workflows.

China’s mobile-first, platform-centric economy favors seamless integration between insurers and tech ecosystems. Partnerships with platforms like WeChat, Alipay, and JD.com allow insurers to reach customers at scale while embedding insurance into everyday digital experiences. AI also supports product innovation in health, lifestyle, and usage-based lines.

Government policy plays a proactive role. National plans such as "Made in China 2025" and guidelines from the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) encourage AI development with clear guardrails around transparency, non-discrimination, and data protection. Chinese regulators require insurers to document AI decision processes and mitigate algorithmic bias.

Key lessons: 

  • Digital ecosystems drive scale and speed 

  • Customer expectations are mobile-native and real-time  

  • Compliance must evolve with fast-moving tech  

  • Strong central governance enables bold innovation   

Southeast Asia: Rising markets, leapfrogging through AI  

Highlights:  

  • High digital adoption, low insurance penetration 

  • Regional innovation from players like AIA, FWD, and Manulife 

  • Regulatory push for inclusive, tech-enabled growth  

Southeast Asia’s insurance markets are young, fragmented, and full of growth potential. AI is helping insurers address infrastructure gaps, streamline service, and expand access. Countries like Vietnam, Indonesia, and the Philippines offer a blank slate where insurers can skip legacy systems and move directly to cloud-native, AI-driven models.  

Insurers such as AIA use AI to automate claims in Thailand and Singapore, cutting processing times dramatically. FWD’s training platform “FWD Cube” uses digital humans to simulate realistic client interactions, improving agent preparedness. Manulife’s use of generative AI helps agents personalize advice and improve retention.  

Despite high smartphone usage, insurance awareness and trust remain low in several markets. AI-powered personalization and digital onboarding help bridge this trust gap. Regulators are stepping up too. Indonesia’s OJK, Singapore’s MAS, and Malaysia’s BNM are issuing AI guidance focused on fairness, explainability, and inclusive design.

Key lessons:  

  • AI enables leapfrogging legacy systems 

  • Training and sales enablement are major value drivers 

  • Regulatory landscapes are modernizing fast 

  • Market-by-market nuance is essential  

US: From Innovation to industrialization

Highlights:  

  • AI adoption led by major incumbents and insurtechs 

  • Strong focus on customer experience and agent productivity  

  • State-by-state regulatory complexity  

The US market combines strong AI innovation with operational friction. Progressive and Allstate use AI in dynamic pricing, fraud detection, and telematics-based risk modeling. Lemonade automates onboarding, policy issuance, and claims with AI-powered chatbots. Meanwhile, incumbents like State Farm and Nationwide use generative AI to empower agents with predictive insights and personalized scripts.  

What sets the US apart is the sheer volume of data and the pace of insurtech innovation. Yet integration across legacy core systems remains a bottleneck. Many insurers are investing in cloud migration and middleware to enable real-time AI insights. Claims triage, underwriting automation, and virtual assistants are top use cases. On the regulatory side, complexity is high. With 50 different insurance departments, carriers must navigate varied rules around data usage, discrimination, and explainability. The NAIC provides a framework, but implementation varies. Ethical AI practices, especially in pricing and claims, are under increasing scrutiny. 

Key lessons:  

  • Innovation is strong, but integration is uneven 

  • Agent enablement remains a top priority 

  • Compliance must be localized and robust  

  • Modernizing core systems is essential  

Europe: Cautious progress under tight regulation  

Highlights: 

  • High awareness of data privacy and algorithmic bias 

  • Slow but steady AI integration 

  • Growing alignment with EU’s AI Act and GDPR  

Europe’s insurers operate under some of the world’s strictest data and AI regulations. GDPR has shaped how customer data can be collected and processed, while the proposed EU AI Act classifies insurance-related AI systems as “high risk.” As a result, adoption is deliberate and heavily scrutinized.  

Insurers in Germany, the Netherlands, and the Nordics are using AI in back-office automation, fraud detection, and predictive modeling. AXA, Allianz, and Generali are exploring customer-facing AI cautiously focusing on applications that enhance transparency and trust, like digital advisors and consent-based personalization.  

Fintech and academic partnerships help build AI capabilities without risking overexposure. Innovation hubs in Berlin, Paris, and Zurich support testing, but cross-border coordination remains challenging. Insurers must balance AI’s benefits with legal requirements for explainability, fairness, and auditability.  

Key lessons:  

  • Ethics and compliance shape AI strategy 

  • Customer-facing AI adoption is cautious but growing 

  • Regulatory clarity will accelerate adoption 

  • Collaboration helps insurers manage complexit 

Strategic recommendations for insurance leaders

  • Adapt AI to local contexts: One-size-fits-all doesn’t work. Tailor AI applications to regional infrastructure, customer expectations, and compliance norms.  
  • Balance speed with governance: Move fast, but build systems that are explainable, auditable, and secure.  
  • Focus on customer value: Use AI to solve real customer problems, not just cut costs. 
  • Invest in talent and tools: Build cross-functional AI teams and invest in digital sales enablement. 
  • Think ecosystem-wide: Partner with platforms, tech players, and regulators to scale impact.  
  • Measure and communicate impact: Define success metrics early and track ROI across use cases.  
  • Future-proof the operating model: AI is not a one-off investment. Build dynamic capabilities that evolve with technology and regulation. 

Authors

Global Head of Insurance and Managing Partner
Frankfurt, Germany
Senior Partner
Munich, Germany
Partner
Munich, Germany
Senior Advisor
Paris, France
Partner
Madrid, Spain
Managing Partner, APAC
Singapore, Singapore
Partner
Sydney, Australia
Managing Director Japan
Tokyo, Japan
Partner
Chicago, USA
Partner
Copenhagen, Denmark
Partner
Zurich, Switzerland
Managing Director Poland
Warsaw, Poland
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