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Intelligent AI enters US market to tackle property underwriting data gaps

Intelligent AI enters US market to tackle property underwriting data gaps

Insurtech Intelligent AI has expanded into the US market after being selected for the Connecticut InsurTech Corridor. The move builds on traction in the London market and reflects rising demand from insurers looking to improve data quality and underwriting accuracy.

The company points to a persistent issue. Around 40-50% of submissions still arrive incomplete, and underwriters spend more than half their time chasing missing data instead of assessing risk.

The problem gets worse in large property portfolios, where inconsistent or outdated information affects pricing and exposure management.

Intelligent AI’s platform focuses on fixing that gap. It delivers high-resolution COPE data – construction, occupancy, protection and exposure – along with rebuild cost intelligence. The goal is simple. Give insurers a structured, consistent view of property risk at the point of underwriting.

The system integrates into insurer workflows through an API-first, cloud-based setup. It supports underwriting, claims and portfolio management without forcing teams to switch systems.

The platform aims to improve submission quality, reduce underinsurance and strengthen catastrophe exposure analysis.

Anthony Peake said the US expansion follows directly from work already done in London. He said insurers who solve data quality issues early will win better risks, improve loss ratios and build stronger portfolios. The Connecticut InsurTech Corridor gives the company direct access to leading US carriers.

We believe intelligent insight is the key to better business decision making, which will, in turn, create a better world. We want to help you make more informed decisions faster.

“That’s why we’ve built the Intelligent Risk Underwriting platform that uses artificial intelligence to provide actionable insights.”

The expansion also lines up with Intelligent AI’s participation in a Corridor industry event, bringing together insurers, investors and insurtech firms across the Hartford – New York – Boston region. The area remains a central hub for commercial P&C insurance decisions in the US.

The move reflects a broader shift across the sector. Insurers are placing more weight on data-driven underwriting as portfolio complexity rises and catastrophe exposure becomes harder to manage.