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CRC Group launches middle market property program on Insurisk

CRC Group used Insurisk to launch a middle market property program with up to $50 million in capacity for non-catastrophe risks, single-location accounts, and small schedules.

Daniel Reid··2 min read
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CRC Group launches middle market property program on Insurisk
Source: reinsurancene.ws

CRC Group rolled out a middle market property program on its exclusive Insurisk platform, using software and underwriting rules to package capacity for non-catastrophe commercial property risks. The program is built for single-location and small-schedule accounts, offers up to $50 million in capacity, and is backed by A.M. Best A- or better-rated paper on an all-risk basis.

The target is a familiar middle market slice: offices, habitational or retail property, light manufacturing, warehousing and distribution, hospitality, and education or institutional occupancies. CRC also positioned the offering around a minimum premium starting at $25,000, which makes the structure look less like a broad-market property form and more like a disciplined placement lane for risks that fit a tighter appetite.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Alex Bonds, president of Insurisk, framed the launch as a move to deliver “specialized underwriting solutions” with responsive capacity and disciplined risk selection. That language matters because the value is not just the paper behind the deal. It is the platform layer that lets CRC define the appetite, route the business, and give brokers a more standardized path to quote and bind without turning the program into a one-size-fits-all product.

CRC dated its announcement to June 18, 2026, and the launch moved through trade coverage over June 19 and June 22. That timing puts the product squarely inside CRC’s broader push to use its own technology and underwriting infrastructure to launch niche specialty products faster, rather than relying on ad hoc market access for each account.

The scale behind the launch is not small. CRC Group says it places more than $33 billion in annual premium, operates from more than 100 offices, and employs roughly 6,000 people. Company materials also cite relationships with more than 650 carriers, which gives Insurisk the kind of capacity network that can support a program built around targeted property appetites instead of open-ended submission flow.

The middle market property rollout also fits a busy stretch for CRC in 2026. In March, the company launched REDY INTEL, an AI-powered engine embedded in its REDY platform, expanded Insurisk for data center insurance demand, and completed the acquisition of ARC Excess & Surplus. In June, CRC named Bethany Greenwood chief executive officer of its Underwriting Division and Bill Goldstein head of Strategic Partnerships, Capacity and Capital Solutions. Those moves point to a company investing in the plumbing needed to keep turning underwriting appetite into distributable programs.

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