How to Evaluate a InsurTech Startup at Series B: Investor Framework
Insurance is a $6T global industry with structurally high margins and actuarial moats. Successful insurtechs that demonstrate better loss ratios can scale dramatically. This guide covers a 7-step evaluation framework specifically designed for InsurTech startups at the Series B stage.
7-Step Evaluation Framework: InsurTech at Series B
Verify the Founding Team
For InsurTech startups, the team is the primary investment signal at early stage. Check: (1) domain expertise in InsurTech — does the team have direct experience in the industry they're disrupting? (2) prior startup experience and exits; (3) LinkedIn verification of claimed roles and credentials; (4) GitHub activity for technical founders; (5) reference calls with former colleagues or investors.
Validate Traction Metrics
The most important metric for InsurTech at this stage is Loss Ratio. Benchmark: <60% is excellent | <70% is good | >80% is unsustainable. Losses paid as % of premiums earned — the core profitability metric. Always request underlying data — bank statements, CRM exports, or platform data — rather than trusting deck figures alone.
Screen for Sector-Specific Red Flags
InsurTech pitch decks frequently contain these critical red flags that general DD frameworks miss: Loss ratio above 80% without path to improvement (CRITICAL): An 80%+ loss ratio before expenses means the business is paying out more in claims than is sustainable. Poor underwriting model or adverse selection is the typical cause.. No carrier partner or reinsurance relationship confirmed (CRITICAL): MGAs and program administrators need a carrier to hold the paper. Without a signed carrier relationship, the business cannot legally operate.
Validate Market Size Independently
The InsurTech market is $6T (global insurance premiums), growing at 11% CAGR for insurtech through 2030. Validate TAM sourcing: is it bottom-up or top-down? Does the SAM represent the realistic addressable segment within the company's go-to-market reach? Cross-reference with industry reports and comparable company data.
Map the Competitive Landscape
InsurTech investors have seen multiple generations of competition in this category. Key comparables: Lemonade (IPO 2020 → $5B peak valuation), Root Insurance (IPO 2020 → $6B at IPO). Ask explicitly about differentiation from each — vague answers signal incomplete competitive awareness.
Conduct Regulatory & Compliance Review
InsurTech startups face specific regulatory risks: State insurance licensing by line of business in all operating states; Rate filing and approval requirements with state DOI; Reinsurance capital requirements and solvency ratios. Verify compliance posture before advancing to term sheet.
Synthesize and Assign Investment Verdict
Combine all findings into a structured verdict: INVEST (clear thesis, strong team, de-risked execution), DIG DEEPER (promising but unresolved questions), or PASS (fundamental flaws in team, market, or traction). DDR automates this synthesis and assigns a score from 1–10.
What Series B Investors Specifically Look For in InsurTech
- $3M–$15M ARR with >100% YoY growth
- Proven sales motion: full quota-carrying team with attainment data
- Expansion into new segments or geographies underway
- Net Revenue Retention consistently above 110%
- Gross margin expansion visible in historical data
- Clear path to profitability or capital efficiency
Series B Red Flags (Stage-Specific)
- ARR growth decelerating below 80% YoY
- Sales team hiring not keeping pace with pipeline
- NRR declining (early product-market fit decay)
- Key executive attrition in past 12 months
- Customer concentration still above 30% in top 3
InsurTech Due Diligence — All Guides
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