Dig|In is where the best minds in insurance discuss the most innovative ideas and technology driving the digital transformation of the industry.
$820M disclosed | 4 transactions | Heaviest week of 2026 by capital deployed
Every deal this week is AI-native. Every deal attacks a different layer of the insurance infrastructure stack: claims administration, carrier underwriting, software modernization, and catastrophe capital. Gallagher Re's Q1 2026 report, released simultaneously, confirms the macro: global insurtech funding reached $1.63B in Q1, with AI-focused firms capturing 95% of all capital deployed. This week alone represents half of that quarterly total in five days. The insurance industry is not experimenting with AI. It is funding the companies that will make the current operating model obsolete.
This wasn’t a big week. It was a decisive one.
Across six transactions, the signal is clear: insurance is consolidating around control—of data, distribution, capital, and underwriting.
From Counterpart taking risk onto its own balance sheet, to Northwestern Mutual turning venture into a distribution strategy, to Baldwin completing a fully integrated insurance stack—this is no longer about incremental innovation.
It’s about who owns the system
Capital this week flowed decisively toward AI-driven infrastructure and tightly integrated distribution models, with standout rounds in claims, TPA, and Medicare platforms. At the same time, both early-stage MGAs and scaled brokers attracted funding, reinforcing a market where owning workflow, data, and carrier alignment—not just distribution—defines competitive advantage.
This week’s deals reinforce a single theme:
Insurance is being re-architected around workflows, data, and capital.
AI is moving into decision-making layers
Infrastructure players are capturing control points
Private capital is reshaping balance sheets and distribution
The competitive edge is no longer distribution or brand.
It’s:
Who owns the workflow—and who controls the capital behind it.
~$657M flowed into insurance last week.
But the signal isn’t the capital — it’s the direction.
A €5B+ health platform scaling across Europe.
A control deal in embedded insurance.
Carriers investing in agent-facing AI.
$500M shifting into insurance-linked private credit.
This isn’t about disruption anymore.
It’s about who controls the system.