How REITs and Large Landlords Insure Portfolios More Efficiently
Last updated July 2026REITs and large landlords insure portfolios more efficiently by moving predictable loss layers into owned captive insurance companies, retaining underwriting profit that would otherwise fund carrier margins.
Key takeaways
REITs reduce insurance cost by shifting predictable loss layers into owned captives.
Fronting carriers preserve lender compliance while the captive absorbs underlying risk.
Group captives return underwriting profit and investment income to member landlords as dividends.
Portfolios with sub-40% loss ratios generate the strongest captive economics.
Layered programs separate working losses, catastrophe risk, and excess coverage for pricing efficiency.
The traditional insurance model treats a 500-property multifamily REIT the same way it treats a single office tower: premium in, claims out, carrier keeps the difference. For institutional portfolios with disciplined risk management, that difference is significant. It is also recoverable through structural changes to how coverage is bought, held, and reinsured.
Why the Traditional Market Overprices Institutional Portfolios
Standard commercial property placements price risk on aggregate exposure. A REIT with $2B in insured values across twelve states pays a rate per $100 of value that reflects the carrier's book-wide catastrophe load, reinsurance costs, expense ratio, and target combined ratio. That rate does not adjust downward for the fact that the REIT's five-year loss ratio might be 22%.
Claim: Commercial property rate increases peaked at 20.4% year-over-year during Q1 2023 before moderating. Source: Marsh Global Insurance Market Index Date: 2023
Claim: Global commercial property rates rose for 13 consecutive quarters through the recent hard market. Source: Marsh Global Insurance Market Index Date: 2024
The result is a structural mismatch. The market prices you against the loss experience of poorly maintained properties, deferred capex portfolios, and coastal concentration risk you do not carry. Meanwhile, your organization is funding losses that never occur, and the carrier is booking the spread as underwriting profit.
For portfolios in the $250M-$3B range, that spread is typically the largest recoverable line item in the insurance budget. Buying groups and jumbo deductibles help at the margins. Captive structures address the root cause.
Three Structural Changes That Reduce Portfolio Insurance Cost
Efficient portfolio insurance programs share three design decisions.
Layer the tower deliberately. Working losses (the frequency layer, typically $0-$250K per occurrence) behave predictably for institutional portfolios. Buffer layers ($250K-$5M) cover moderate severity events. Excess and catastrophe layers cover tail risk. Buying all three from the same admitted carrier is inefficient because the working layer is not really insurance, it is prefunded loss payment with a carrier markup.
Sophisticated programs retain the working layer through a captive, buy the buffer layer through reinsurance or a fronting arrangement, and place catastrophe cover in the traditional market where the risk transfer is genuine.
Own the underwriting profit on the frequency layer. A captive insurance company writes the primary policy (or reinsures a fronting carrier that does). Premiums flow into the captive as reserves. Losses are paid from those reserves. What remains after claims, expenses, and required capital is underwriting profit, which belongs to the captive's owners.
Claim: Captive insurance premium volume reached approximately $76.3B worldwide. Source: Business Insurance Captive Rankings Date: 2023
Claim: There are approximately 6,181 active captive insurance companies worldwide. Source: Business Insurance World Captive Directory Date: 2023
Coordinate lender compliance from day one. Commercial mortgage documents specify carrier ratings (typically A- or better from AM Best), coverage amounts, deductible caps, and named insured requirements. Captive structures satisfy these through fronting arrangements where an A-rated carrier issues the policy and reinsures the risk back to the captive. The lender sees a compliant certificate. The economics stay with the owner.
Group captives extend this model across multiple landlords who share a defined risk layer. Each member's premium is calculated actuarially based on their own exposure and loss history, so a low-loss-ratio contributor is not subsidizing a poor performer. Dividends are allocated the same way.
Implementation Sequence for a $250M+ Portfolio
The path from traditional placement to captive-supported program follows a predictable sequence.
Feasibility (60-90 days). An actuary reviews five years of loss runs, current program structure, deductible history, and portfolio composition. The output is a projected captive premium, expected loss pick, and pro forma showing the potential dividend range under various loss scenarios. This is where you determine whether the economics justify the setup cost.
Structure selection (30-45 days). Single-parent captive, group captive, or protected cell? The answer depends on portfolio size, risk appetite, and whether you want to share risk with other institutional landlords. Portfolios under $500M in insured values often start in a cell or group structure to reach critical mass. Larger portfolios can support a standalone captive.
Domicile and formation (60-90 days). Vermont, Bermuda, Cayman, and several US states are common domiciles. Selection depends on capital requirements, regulatory posture, and where the owner's operations are based. Formation includes filing the business plan with the regulator, capitalizing the captive, and appointing directors and service providers.
Fronting and reinsurance (60-90 days, overlapping). The fronting carrier issues the policy the lender sees. A reinsurance treaty cedes the risk to the captive. This is where lender-compliant certificates get produced and where excess and catastrophe layers get placed in the traditional market.
Bind and operate. Once bound, the captive collects premium, pays claims through a third-party administrator, and closes each policy year with an actuarial reserve review. Underwriting profit accumulates. Surplus builds. Dividends get declared based on the captive's financial position and the member's individual loss experience.
Ongoing operation involves quarterly financial statements, annual actuarial certification, regulatory filings in the domicile, and coordination with the fronting carrier at each renewal. These functions are typically outsourced to a captive manager.
The efficiency gain compounds over time. In year one, the visible savings might be a reduced net premium outlay. By year three or four, accumulated surplus and dividend distributions often exceed the annual premium of the original traditional program. The captive becomes a balance sheet asset rather than a P&L expense.
Bringing It Together
For REITs and large landlords with low loss ratios, insurance efficiency is a structural problem, not a shopping problem. Rebidding the program every year yields marginal improvements. Redesigning how risk is held, financed, and transferred yields step-change improvements. Captive structures, layered towers, and fronting arrangements are the mechanisms that make this possible while keeping lenders, rating agencies, and regulators satisfied.
If your portfolio sits in the $250M-$3B range and your five-year loss ratio runs below 40%, the economics likely support a captive analysis. Book a Meeting to review your loss history and receive a feasibility projection.
By the numbers
Global commercial property insurance rates rose consecutively through the hard market cycle before softening in 2024
Commercial property rate increases peaked before recent moderation
Frequently asked questions
Why do REITs pay more for property insurance than comparable single-asset owners?
What is a group captive and how does it help large landlords?
Can a REIT use a captive without violating lender insurance requirements?
What loss ratio makes a captive worth exploring?
How long does captive setup take for a large real estate portfolio?
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Real Property Captive sets up Group Captive Insurance structures for large real estate owners with portfolios valued $10M-$3B. Property owners own their insurance rather than paying premiums to third parties, converting premiums into owned equity and potential dividends. Services include captive setup and administration, actuarial premium calculation, claims handling, reinsurance coordination, lender compliance, and policy issuance through A-rated fronting carriers.
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