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Data and trends of climate risk in Spain 2025. Learn the flexible capacity strategy to sustain your operation.
Spanish insurers face a scenario where the frequency and severity of claims are increasing, especially due to extreme weather and more frequent use of coverage. This report analyzes recent market data, identifies triggers of operational peaks, and explains how flexible talent models help sustain operations without increasing fixed structure.
The 41% increase of Spanish policyholders who reported at least one claim in the last year shows two key market phenomena:
More frequent insurance usePolicyholders show a growing tendency to claim for incidents they did not report before:
This is closely linked to:
Spanish policyholders are more demanding: they expect speed, personalized follow-up, and near real-time resolution. Customers do not differentiate between seasonal peaks and normal activity, generating sustained pressure.
A small increase in volume multiplies operational work:
Spain is one of the most exposed European countries to extreme climate risks, especially on the Mediterranean coast and Cantabrian coast.
When a DANA or storm occurs:
Many policyholders confuse what private insurance covers and what the Consorcio covers, causing:
This increases time per file and reinforces the need for specialized and scalable talent.
The average cost of €4,400–4,500 per claim in companies shows a clear trend:
Business claims are increasingly complex and expensive, especially in commerce, logistics, and small industry.
Cost drivers:
Operational effect
A single company can generate dozens of claims during a storm, with multiple stakeholders:
Administrative workload multiplies, and economic impact requires fast and rigorous processing.
Claims teams in Spain are sized for annual averages, not peaks. This implies:
If not met:
35% of Spanish insurers outsource claims. Reasons:
It is hard to hire and train specialized claims handlers.
Internal structure is the most rigid insurance cost.
Claims business is not stable or linear.
In Spain, automation adds value in:
Benefits:
Flexible specialized talent can:
Real impact:
Identify where service breaks:
80% of delays occur in 3 stages.
Examples:
Recommended automation:
Key KPIs in Spain:
Reduces learning curve and activation time to 48–72 hours.
Automated messages + human interaction:
Stop handling peaks with fixed structure. Implement a flexible capacity model to absorb demand, reduce backlog, and maintain service quality without sunk costs.
View solutionObserve weather changes, seasonality, renewals, and risk events.
Registration, classification, document validation, follow-up, and administrative support.
Backlog, cycle times, SLA, AHT, and handler productivity.
Yes. It reduces fixed costs, avoids overload, and speeds up claims during intense peaks.
Guide with a comparative table of Freelancers, Traditional BPO and Xternus for efficient outsourcing and strategic control.
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