Are property/casualty insurers facing a potential retention problem with small business customers?
According to the J.D. Power 2025 U.S. Small Commercial Insura
nce Study, just 55% of customers say they “definitely will” renew with their current insurer, down six percentage points from a year ago.
The downturn in customer loyalty comes as premiums have been rising and that could explain why some customer indicate they may jump ship. But it’s not all abou
t premiums, the survey found. A good percentage (16%) of customers point to a positive service experience as a reason for
sticking with their current insurer — and that’s a stronger influence than price, coverage options, or reputation.
“Interestingly, the drop in retention is not solely attributable to higher premiums,” says Stephen Crewdson, manag
ing director of global insurance intelligence at J.D. Power. “In fact, insurers
that communicate well and provide a higher level of service can make huge inroads toward keeping customers.”
According to Crewsdon, satisfaction is at an identical level among customers who understand why their pre
mium is increasing as it is among those whose premiums are not increasing at all, which he believes “puts a huge on
us on insurers to bolster their outreach around rate increases.”
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The J.D. Power survey measures overall customer satisfaction among small commercial insurance customers with
50 or fewer employees. It rates insurers on trust; price for coverage; product/coverage offerings; ease of doing bus
iness; people; problem resolution; and digital channels.
Following are some key findings of the 2025 study:
Retention declines across the board: After several years of improvement and stability, intended retention has dropped significantly among customers acr
oss virtually all demographic groups. The largest dip is among Millennials1 (-12 percentage points).
Service sets tone for retention: Competitive pricing is a key reason customers select and stay with an insurer, but
service is just as important in retaining them. Overall, 16% of customers say good service experience is the most c
ommon driver of retention, beating out price, coverage options and reputation.
Communication about rate increases is vital to satisfaction:
Overall satisfaction, which is 722 (on a 1,000-point scale) among customers who say they completely understand why their premiums increased, is identical
to that among customers who have no increase at all. The number of customers who say they completely understand the reason for their rate increase has dropped by 5 percentage points since 2024.































