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Corgi launches AI-native claims platform with 5,000 adjusters

Corgi Claims went live with more than 5,000 licensed adjusters and AI that triages losses at first notice. The pitch is speed without stripping out human judgment.

Daniel Reid··2 min read
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Corgi launches AI-native claims platform with 5,000 adjusters
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Corgi launched Corgi Claims on June 29, pairing an AI intake layer with a nationwide network of more than 5,000 licensed adjusters. The platform reviews every claim the instant it is reported, flags severity, coverage issues and missing documentation, then hands the file to a human adjuster with the early paperwork already sorted.

That is the part of claims economics that matters most. Corgi is not pitching a no-touch claims shop; it is selling a hybrid operating model in which software handles the repetitive front end and licensed adjusters handle investigation and decision-making. In a market where carriers and program administrators care about first-contact speed, cycle time and handling cost, that split is the real product. Corgi says the service is available to carriers, MGAs, captives, program administrators and self-insured organizations that want outsourced claims administration or extra capacity when losses pile up.

The scope is broad enough to matter beyond one niche. Corgi Claims covers commercial liability, property, catastrophe, renters, trucking, workers compensation and specialty programs, which puts it in the middle of the same claims backlog and surge problems that have pushed insurers toward automation elsewhere in the stack. The company’s own framing is consistent with that strategy: its materials describe Corgi as a full-stack insurance platform spanning underwriting, claims handling and embedded insurance, not a single-point claims tool.

The regulatory structure is part of the story too. Corgi said claims administration and related services run through its subsidiaries and affiliates that are licensed as third-party administrators or adjusting firms in the jurisdictions where they operate. That matters in AI claims because the technology can classify, route and surface risk, but it still has to sit inside a licensed operating model when coverage calls and severity judgments move from software to people.

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Source: prnewswire.com

The launch also lands after a rapid capital run. In May 2026, Corgi said it raised $160 million in Series B funding at a $1.3 billion valuation. Earlier in 2026, the company said a $106 million Series B1 led by TCV brought total funding to $378 million and lifted its valuation to $2.6 billion. Founded by Emily Yuan and Nico Laqua, Corgi is betting that the next claims platform winner will be the one that cuts admin time without outsourcing the judgment that still belongs to an adjuster.

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