Category: PI comparison · Reviewed by Amy Price, Account Executive · Last reviewed May 2026
UK businesses can choose from brokers of very different shapes when arranging professional indemnity (PI) insurance. Some operate from a single office serving a regional client base; some run national operations with multiple offices and dedicated PI teams. Both can be effective and both are common; the right choice depends on the risk and on what the buyer values in a relationship. This guide sets out, neutrally, how the two models tend to differ.
This is a comparison of two broker models:
Both models are FCA-regulated and legitimate. There are excellent national brokers and excellent local brokers; there are also less effective brokers in both categories. The structural label does not determine quality; it shapes the model.
PI in the UK is placed via direct insurers, comparison sites, and brokers. The broker tier ranges from sole-trader local brokers to international firms with national or global PI practices. Each model has trade-offs around market access, sector expertise, personal service, response time and price discovery. PI also includes regulator-mandated wordings (SRA Minimum Terms, ARB requirements, RICS PII wording, others) that shape how placements are arranged.
A national broker serves clients across the UK, often with multiple offices and centralised PI expertise. A local broker focuses on a regional client base, often with deep local market knowledge and accessible physical presence.
National brokers may have dedicated PI teams, sometimes structured around specific professions. Local brokers may carry PI expertise as part of a broader generalist book, or may specialise within a region.
National brokers typically maintain scale-based facilities with PI insurers — direct agencies and, in some cases, bespoke schemes or binders. Local brokers often have long-standing relationships with regional underwriters and may access the same insurers through different channels, including via wholesale brokers.
Local brokers often offer face-to-face meetings, on-site visits and a small named team. National brokers offer scale, broader team coverage, and continuity if a primary contact is unavailable. Service responsiveness varies more by firm than by category.
National brokers may have broader market access and scale leverage. Local brokers may have deeper personal underwriter relationships that produce sympathetic terms. Either model can produce competitive premiums depending on the risk and the placement strategy.
Local brokers often offer continuity through a small named team. National brokers offer continuity through a larger team structure with backup cover. Buyers may value either approach.
National brokers typically invest in centralised systems and digital client portals. Local brokers may run leaner technology, with administration handled more personally. Both can deliver good service; the model differs.
National brokers carry the resilience of scale — depth of staffing, multiple offices, central compliance functions. Local brokers carry the resilience of a tight team that knows the client well. Either can fail and either can excel; the structure shapes the failure modes.
A national broker takes the customer’s risk through a centralised PI team — sometimes through a local office, sometimes via a national service centre — and approaches the insurers it has agencies with. The placement is conducted by specialists who may handle PI exclusively. Renewals and mid-term changes are processed through the same team or the broker’s central operations.
National brokers are often used by firms with operations across multiple sites, regulated professions wanting dedicated PI specialists, mid-market and larger commercial accounts, and firms wanting a single broker for all UK PI needs.
A local broker takes the customer’s risk through a small team, often with a single named broker as the primary contact. The broker may approach insurers directly or, for specialist PI, place through a wholesale broker that adds open-market access. Renewals and mid-term changes typically run through the same named team.
Local brokers are often used by firms that value personal service and a long-term named relationship, SMEs whose PI placement fits standard wordings, firms that prefer face-to-face meetings, and clients who already use the broker for other commercial lines.
| Dimension | National PI broker | Local PI broker | What to ask |
|---|---|---|---|
| Geographic reach | UK-wide | Regional / local | “Where are you based, and where do you serve?” |
| Sector specialism | Often dedicated PI teams | Varies — specialist or generalist | “Do you have a dedicated PI team?” |
| Insurer relationships | Scale-based agencies and facilities | Regional and via wholesale | “Which insurers will be approached?” |
| Personal service | Team-based continuity | Named-broker continuity | “Who will be my primary contact?” |
| Face-to-face access | Variable | Often available locally | “Do you offer on-site meetings?” |
| Technology | Centralised systems and portals | Leaner systems | “How will we exchange documents and renewals?” |
| Resilience | Depth of staffing | Tight team familiarity | “What happens if my contact is on leave?” |
| Claims service | Central PI claims team | Named broker / claims contact | “Who handles a notification?” |
A firm with multiple sites, complex placements or a profession requiring dedicated PI expertise may find a national broker’s depth of resource useful. A firm valuing a long-standing personal relationship, on-site meetings and a single named contact may find a local broker fits the way it wants to buy insurance.
A firm with a straightforward risk could be well-served by either: a national broker offering scale-based pricing, or a local broker offering personal service and steady continuity. The choice often turns on the buyer’s preference for how they want to interact with their broker over time.
These are observations, not prescriptions. Many regulated professions use national specialist firms; many SMEs use local brokers for all their commercial lines including PI. Neither is the “correct” answer.
Both national and local brokers are FCA-regulated. The regulatory framework applies regardless of geography: ICOBS, the FCA’s product governance and Consumer Duty rules where applicable, and the rules on remuneration and disclosure. The FCA register records each firm’s status and permissions.
Geographic reach is not, in itself, a regulatory category. A small local broker can be directly authorised in its own right; a national broker can be directly authorised; an Appointed Representative arrangement can apply at any scale. Buyers should check the FCA register for any broker they are considering.
A national broker tends to add value where:
A local broker tends to suit where:
Apex Insurance Brokers Limited is based in Bristol and operates as a directly authorised, independent specialist PI broker serving clients across the UK. We hold our own FCA permissions (firm reference 724952) and our own insurer agencies. That is a factual description of our model: locally rooted, nationally active, specialist in PI. We are not the only broker that fits a particular description, and buyers should evaluate any broker — national, local, or hybrid — on the merits set out in this article.
If you would like to discuss a PI placement, you can contact us here.
Are national brokers always more expensive than local brokers? No. Pricing depends on the risk, the insurers approached and the placement strategy. National brokers can secure scale-based pricing on schemes and facilities; local brokers can secure competitive open-market terms via direct relationships or wholesale. Premium is one factor; service, advice and claims handling are others.
Does a local broker have access to the same insurers as a national broker? Often the same insurers, sometimes via different routes. Local brokers may hold direct agencies for some insurers and access others via wholesale brokers. The buyer should ask which insurers will be approached and via what route.
Is a national broker better for regulated professions? Not automatically. Some national brokers have dedicated profession-specific PI teams; some local brokers specialise in regulated professions. The relevant question is whether the broker — national or local — has the wording knowledge and insurer access appropriate to the profession.
Can a local broker handle a large PI claim? A local broker can handle a notification on behalf of the insured, work with the insurer’s claims team, and bring in solicitors if required. Some local brokers also work with claims consultants. Buyers should ask how the broker handles claims in practice.
Do national brokers offer face-to-face meetings? Many do, through local offices or visits to client sites. The model varies by firm. Buyers who value face-to-face contact should confirm the arrangements with any broker.
Where is Apex based? Apex Insurance Brokers Limited is based in Bristol and serves clients across the UK. Our FCA firm reference is 724952.
Should I prioritise national reach or local service? That is the buyer’s call. Both can deliver effective placements. The question is which model matches how the buyer wants to interact with their broker.
Can I have a local broker even if my business operates nationally? Yes. Many businesses with national operations use local brokers as their primary point of contact, particularly where the relationship is long-standing or where the broker has the relevant insurer access.
{
"@context": "https://schema.org",
"@type": "FAQPage",
"mainEntity": [
{
"@type": "Question",
"name": "Are national brokers always more expensive than local brokers?",
"acceptedAnswer": {
"@type": "Answer",
"text": "No. Pricing depends on the risk, the insurers approached and the placement strategy. National brokers can secure scale-based pricing on schemes and facilities; local brokers can secure competitive open-market terms via direct relationships or wholesale. Premium is one factor; service, advice and claims handling are others."
}
},
{
"@type": "Question",
"name": "Does a local broker have access to the same insurers as a national broker?",
"acceptedAnswer": {
"@type": "Answer",
"text": "Often the same insurers, sometimes via different routes. Local brokers may hold direct agencies for some insurers and access others via wholesale brokers. The buyer should ask which insurers will be approached and via what route."
}
},
{
"@type": "Question",
"name": "Is a national broker better for regulated professions?",
"acceptedAnswer": {
"@type": "Answer",
"text": "Not automatically. Some national brokers have dedicated profession-specific PI teams; some local brokers specialise in regulated professions. The relevant question is whether the broker — national or local — has the wording knowledge and insurer access appropriate to the profession."
}
},
{
"@type": "Question",
"name": "Can a local broker handle a large PI claim?",
"acceptedAnswer": {
"@type": "Answer",
"text": "A local broker can handle a notification on behalf of the insured, work with the insurer's claims team, and bring in solicitors if required. Some local brokers also work with claims consultants. Buyers should ask how the broker handles claims in practice."
}
},
{
"@type": "Question",
"name": "Do national brokers offer face-to-face meetings?",
"acceptedAnswer": {
"@type": "Answer",
"text": "Many do, through local offices or visits to client sites. The model varies by firm. Buyers who value face-to-face contact should confirm the arrangements with any broker."
}
},
{
"@type": "Question",
"name": "Where is Apex based?",
"acceptedAnswer": {
"@type": "Answer",
"text": "Apex Insurance Brokers Limited is based in Bristol and serves clients across the UK. Our FCA firm reference is 724952."
}
},
{
"@type": "Question",
"name": "Should I prioritise national reach or local service?",
"acceptedAnswer": {
"@type": "Answer",
"text": "That is the buyer's call. Both can deliver effective placements. The question is which model matches how the buyer wants to interact with their broker."
}
},
{
"@type": "Question",
"name": "Can I have a local broker even if my business operates nationally?",
"acceptedAnswer": {
"@type": "Answer",
"text": "Yes. Many businesses with national operations use local brokers as their primary point of contact, particularly where the relationship is long-standing or where the broker has the relevant insurer access."
}
}
]
}
About Apex Insurance Brokers — Apex Insurance Brokers Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, FCA firm reference 724952. Registered in England and Wales, Companies House 07014570. Last reviewed: May 2026.
Apex Insurance Brokers serves UK professional services firms and commercial businesses. Call 0117 325 0027, email hello@apexinsurancebrokers.co.uk, or request a quotation.
Get a quote