FCA strips back insurance rulebook

15 May 2025 08:45 AM

The UK’s world leading insurance market could benefit from simpler, more straightforward rules, under proposals published by the FCA yesterday.

The regulator plans to strip outdated or duplicated requirements from its insurance rulebook, having asked what improvements it could make. The changes could support lower costs and wider access for the businesses and consumers who rely on insurance to manage risk, while maintaining appropriate levels of protection. 

The regulator is proposing to create a new definition to identify large commercial insurance customers who should not be captured by its conduct rules. This would ease the burden on firms insuring larger businesses that can manage risks independently, while protecting smaller commercial customers.

The regulator is also proposing further measures that could benefit the insurance market more widely, including:

Matt Brewis, director of insurance at the FCA, said: 

'We are stripping back our insurance rulebook by removing ineffective, outdated or duplicated regulation, as part of our drive to become a smarter regulator and support growth. 

'We have listened to industry and we are taking action - in doing so we will reduce regulatory costs and increase the competitiveness of the already world-leading UK insurance sector, while maintaining vital protections for smaller customers.'

The regulator is also inviting views on whether it should limit the scope of some rules to UK customers.

The consultation comes following its commitment to withdraw over 100 pages of outdated guidance in a bid to streamline its rules, reduce burdens on businesses, and improve outcomes for consumers after the introduction of the Consumer Duty.

The FCA is asking for comments on these proposals by 2 July 2025.

Notes to editors

  1. Read our Consultation Paper (CP25/12).
  2. FCA strategy with priorities to ‘Support growth’ and become a ‘Smarter regulator’.
  3. Discussion Paper on Commercial and Bespoke insurance.
  4. Feedback Statement on Consumer Duty rule review next steps.