CFC expands product recall cover with broader quality defect protection

New endorsement reflects growing focus on non-safety-related recalls across global supply chains

CFC expands product recall cover with broader quality defect protection

Insurance News

By Paul Lucas

CFC has expanded its product recall offering with a new quality defect endorsement that removes the need for bodily injury or property damage to trigger a claim - highlighting a broader shift in how recall risk is being underwritten.

The move comes as insurers respond to a rise in non-safety-related recalls, where products are withdrawn due to issues such as contamination, mislabelling or defects affecting quality, rather than causing physical harm or damage.

Market evolving beyond traditional triggers

Historically, product recall policies have often required a clear link to bodily injury or third-party property damage before cover responds. While that structure remains common, it has increasingly been challenged by the nature of modern recalls - particularly in sectors like food and beverage, pharmaceuticals and consumer goods.

Across the market, insurers and MGAs have been gradually expanding coverage to address these gaps. Carriers such as Allianz, AXA XL and Tokio Marine HCC, as well as specialist MGA platforms, offer product recall solutions that can include contamination, government recall orders and certain non-injury triggers, depending on policy wording.

However, coverage for purely quality-driven defects - such as issues with taste, smell or appearance - has typically been more limited or subject to tighter conditions.

Broadening cover for quality-driven losses

CFC’s new endorsement removes the injury and property damage requirement, extending cover to a wider range of manufacturing errors that can still lead to costly recalls and business interruption.

This reflects a growing recognition within the insurance market that financial losses from reputational damage, supply chain disruption and lost revenue can be just as significant as those stemming from safety-related incidents.

The insurer said the endorsement also aims to simplify claims handling by reducing complexity and the number of external parties involved in assessing losses.

Pressure on claims, costs and supply chains

The launch comes against a backdrop of increasing recall activity globally, driven by stricter regulation, more complex supply chains and heightened consumer scrutiny.

For insurers, this has translated into more frequent and sometimes more complex claims, particularly where multiple jurisdictions, suppliers and distribution channels are involved.

At the same time, inflationary pressures and higher logistics costs have increased the overall severity of recall losses, making policy design and clarity of triggers more important for both insurers and insureds.

Balancing broader cover with underwriting discipline

Michael Lilley (pictured), product recall team leader at CFC, said the endorsement is intended to reflect how recalls are evolving in practice, particularly as quality issues become a more prominent driver.

He added that simplifying triggers and claims processes can help businesses respond more quickly when issues arise.

While broader triggers can improve relevance for policyholders, they also place greater emphasis on underwriting discipline and pricing adequacy - an area insurers across the recall market continue to monitor as coverage evolves.

The development underscores a wider trend: product recall insurance is gradually shifting from a narrow, safety-led product toward a more comprehensive risk management tool, shaped by the realities of modern manufacturing and global distribution.Top of Form

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