2025 Key Insurance Developments and Trends for 2026 | Hinshaw & Culbertson – Insights for Insurers

Hinshaw & Culbertson - Insights for Insurers

In 2025, Hinshaw’s global insurance services team authored several resources on key developments and decisions that impacted the US insurance industry. From our timely commentary just published in Mealey’s to the third edition of our Duty to Defend 50-state survey and whitepapers covering a variety of areas that impact the industry, our team has you covered.

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2025 Key Insurance Decisions, Trends, & Developments & A Look Ahead To 2026

The “2025 Key Insurance Decisions, Trends, & Developments & A Look Ahead To 2026” commentary, written by Scott Seaman, Pedro Hernandez, and Jordan Evans, examines key trends, developments, and decisions impacting the US insurance industry in 2025 and forecasts potential trends and developments for “America 250” in 2026.

These include social inflation, changes in public policy from the Biden Administration to the second Trump Administration with respect to ESG, DEI, artificial intelligence, and cybersecurity.

They also look at key decisions and developments relating to cybersecurity, privacy, PFAS, COVID-19 business interruption, drugs, guns, insurrections, construction defects, D&O and securities, health, silica, asbestos, environmental, weather-related claims, bad-faith, and extra-contractual liability.

The Duty to Defend – A Fifty-State Survey: Third Edition

The Duty to Defend – A Fifty-State Survey: Third Edition begins with an introduction that examines the duty to defend.
It contains 50 chapters—one for each US state—addressing 11 of the most critical issues regarding the duty to defend in a question-and-answer format, including:

  • the standard for determining whether an insurer has a duty to defend
  • consideration of extrinsic evidence
  • what constitutes a “suit”
  • when the duty to defend begins and ends
  • mixed claims
  • policyholder’s right to independent counsel
  • insurers’ rights of recoupment
  • pre-tender costs
  • consequences of a breach of the duty to defend

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