Why Are Insurers Moving Toward Deferred Commissions and Lower Distribution Costs?
India’s insurance sector is witnessing a regulatory push to rein in rising commission and distribution expenses. The insurance regulator has expressed concerns that high upfront commissions distort long-term policy economics and increase costs for policyholders. As a result, both life and general insurers are evaluating structural changes to commission payouts and expense management frameworks.
These discussions signal a potential shift in how insurers balance distributor incentives, policy persistency, and long-term profitability. If implemented, the changes could reshape business models across the insurance value chain.
Life Insurance: Focus on Commission Rationalisation
🔹 Regulator has flagged concerns over high commission payouts in life insurance.
🔹 Industry has constituted a 9-member committee to review commission structures.
🔹 Committee met for the first time to evaluate ways to reduce distribution costs.
🔹 Unanimous view to move away from front-loaded commissions.
Front-loaded commissions have long been criticised for incentivising mis-selling and weakening policy persistency. The regulator’s intervention aims to better align distributor incentives with long-term customer retention.
Deferred Commission Structure: How It Changes the Model
| Parameter | Current Structure | Proposed Deferred Structure |
|---|---|---|
| Policy Type | Term Life | Term Life |
| Policy Tenure | 20 Years | 20 Years |
| First-Year Commission | 40% | 8% per year (spread over 5 years) |
| Renewal Commission | 5% for 19 years | Paid annually only if policy is renewed |
Under the deferred model, distributor payouts become contingent on policy renewal, encouraging long-term engagement and discouraging aggressive front-end selling practices.
🔹 Committee to submit deferred commission proposal to the regulator on December 18.
🔹 Another meeting scheduled next week to finalise framework details.
Any regulatory endorsement of deferred commissions could materially alter cost structures and distributor economics for life insurers.
General & Health Insurance: Tightening Expense Controls
🔹 Regulator met CEOs of general and health insurers to flag high commission and distribution costs.
🔹 Insurers asked to submit five-year data on distribution costs and management expenses.
🔹 Proposals suggest lowering expense limits for insurers older than five years.
Currently, expense of management limits are capped at 30% for general insurers and 35% for health insurers. Certain market participants have proposed reducing these limits by 5–10% for mature insurers with established scale.
Lower commission and expense caps could improve underwriting profitability over the medium term, but may also create near-term adjustment pressure for distribution-heavy business models.
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Investor Takeaway
Derivative Pro & Nifty Expert Gulshan Khera, CFP®, believes that rationalising commission structures is a long-term positive for the insurance sector, as it aligns distributor incentives with customer retention and profitability. While short-term adjustments may affect growth metrics, disciplined cost control can strengthen balance sheets and earnings quality over time. More sector insights are available at Indian-Share-Tips.com, which is a SEBI Registered Advisory Services.
Related Queries on Insurance Commission Reforms
• What is deferred commission structure in life insurance?
• Why is the regulator targeting high insurance commissions?
• How will lower expense limits impact insurers?
• What does this mean for insurance sector profitability?
SEBI Disclaimer: The information provided in this post is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice. Readers must perform their own due diligence and consult a registered investment advisor before making any investment decisions. The views expressed are general in nature and may not suit individual investment objectives or financial situations.











