Aggregator insurance

Category: Tech distribution · Reviewed by Tim Roche, Director · PI & Commercial · Last reviewed 2026-06-10

Aggregator insurance describes general insurance products distributed through online price comparison websites — principally Compare The Market, MoneySuperMarket, Confused.com and GoCompare in the United Kingdom — which present quotations from a panel of insurers and intermediaries based on consumer-entered details and pass leads to the chosen provider for completion.

Aggregators are themselves authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) as insurance intermediaries and are subject to the FCA Handbook’s ICOBS rules, the Principles for Businesses and the Consumer Duty. The FCA’s 2014 thematic review, “Aggregator websites in the general insurance market” (TR14/11), identified consumer harm relating to the assumption of cover terms and default settings; the FCA’s General Insurance Pricing Practices Market Study (MS18/1) and ensuing policy statement PS21/5 materially affected the aggregator model by prohibiting price walking. See also Price comparison website.

Definition

An aggregator (or price comparison website, PCW) is an online intermediary that:

Aggregators typically receive a per-sale commission from the eventual insurer. In motor and home insurance they account for a substantial share of new business; in pet, travel and small business lines their share is also material.

Legal and regulatory basis

The principal UK regulatory framework comprises:

How it works in practice

The aggregator flow is typically:

  1. Single journey form — driver, vehicle, address, claims history.
  2. Panel call-off — the form is sent to the aggregator’s panel.
  3. Quotation table — usually ranked by annual premium, with default coverage and add-ons preselected.
  4. Click-through to the chosen provider, where the consumer answers additional questions and the contract is bound.
  5. Commission paid to the aggregator (varying by class).

The FCA’s TR14/11 review highlighted risks including consumers assuming “fully comprehensive” defaults, unfamiliar excesses, and limited cover for items such as personal belongings. ICOBS 6A and 4 require clear information on price, excess, sub-limits and significant exclusions.

Common variations and subsequent developments

Example

A consumer obtains a motor quotation on a UK aggregator. The aggregator’s panel returns ten quotations ranked by price. The consumer selects one and clicks through to the insurer, which presents the demands-and-needs statement, the IPID and the policy summary as required by ICOBS 6A. The aggregator’s status disclosure under ICOBS 4 makes clear that it is an intermediary and is paid by the insurer. The renewal premium quoted to the consumer the following year is compliant with PS21/5 — it must not be higher than the equivalent new-business premium offered by the insurer through that channel.

See also

References


This entry is part of the Apex Insurance Wiki. Last reviewed by Matt Bartlett on 2026-06-10. Next review: 2026-12-10.

Apex Insurance Brokers Limited. Authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, FRN 724952. Registered in England and Wales, Companies House 07014570. This entry provides general information about UK insurance concepts and is not regulated advice. Consult your insurance broker on your specific position.

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