Sapiens lands on Everest Group's top 50 insurance technology list
Sapiens made Everest Group’s 2026 Top 50 P&C list and the Life & Annuities ranking, a signal carriers still favor broad platforms with AI-ready depth.

Sapiens has landed a spot in Everest Group’s 2026 Top 50 Property & Casualty Insurance Technology Providers list, and it also made the Life & Annuities ranking, a combination that says as much about carrier priorities as it does about the vendor itself. The recognition, announced May 7 from London, puts Sapiens inside a select field that Everest Group narrowed from more than 200 providers, underscoring how seriously insurers are treating platform breadth, implementation depth, and modernization readiness heading into 2026.
Everest Group said the P&C Top 50 is data-driven, built on market success, geographic footprint, line-of-business breadth, value chain coverage, and innovation and investment intensity. That matters because the list is not framed as a trophy shelf; Everest Group positions it as a benchmarking reference for insurers comparing modernization strategies and for technology providers competing in a market that is becoming more outcome-focused and more AI-driven. In its latest commentary, the firm said the global P&C insurance technology ecosystem represents an estimated US$16 billion to US$18 billion footprint, with AI moving from experimentation into production-grade use across underwriting, claims, and distribution.

For Sapiens, the placement reinforces a pitch built around scale and functional coverage. The company says it serves more than 600 customers in more than 30 countries and offers P&C, workers’ compensation, and life insurance software spanning reinsurance, financial and compliance, data and analytics, digital, and decision management. That broad profile is exactly the kind of footprint carriers tend to favor when they are trying to reduce vendor sprawl and stitch together core systems, digital front ends, and analytics layers without rebuilding everything in fragments.

The real market read is in how Sapiens describes its P&C stack. The company says its SaaS platform embeds intelligence into underwriting profitability, claims efficiency, and faster product launches, while low-code configuration is meant to speed product design and launch without development, customization, or IT involvement. That combination speaks directly to the pressure insurers are under as they push cloud migration, demand quicker product change, and look for AI readiness that goes beyond demos and pilots. In that context, Everest Group’s ranking suggests Sapiens is being evaluated not just as a legacy systems provider, but as one of the vendors expected to carry insurers through the next phase of core modernization.
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