Insurance data · carrier & filing intelligence

Carriers, modeled by jurisdiction and filing.

Insurance regulation is state-by-state and uneven — premium leaders, rate filings, producer licensing, and enforcement live in 50 separate public systems. Sloe normalizes them into one source-backed research layer. State records are jurisdiction-specific — one state's file is not national coverage.

Available now. The insurance lane is built and source-backed — carrier premiums, filings, licenses, and enforcement, normalized with jurisdiction and filing status preserved.

AnchorNAIC · license
SourcesState DOI · SERFF · NAIC
SignalsPremiums · filings · enforcement
StatusAvailable
Premiums
State premium-by-carrier leaders, kept jurisdiction-scoped.
Filings
Rate and form filings where state SERFF access is public.
Licensing
Producer and adjuster license registries by state.
Enforcement
Market-conduct and enforcement actions, source-scoped.
The model

Insurance Regulatory is its own structure.

The insurance model normalizes state public sources — premiums, filings, licensing, and enforcement — keyed on NAIC and license identifiers where available. Jurisdiction, product line, and filing status stay attached; carriers are not merged without source-backed identifiers.

Carriers and identifiers.

NAIC company and group identifiers join carriers across states where the source supports it.

Premiums by market.

State premium leaders stay jurisdiction- and line-scoped — never extrapolated to national share.

Rate and form filings.

SERFF-style filing records keep status, product, and effective date attached.

Producer licensing.

State license registries track producers and adjusters, with status preserved.

Enforcement.

Market-conduct and enforcement actions stay source- and date-scoped.

Affordable access.

Competitor intelligence and regulatory monitoring at a price smaller teams can justify.

Source spine

Built on the primary public record.

The insurance layer is built around public state regulatory sources first, normalized by jurisdiction. No merging of carriers without NAIC or source-backed identifiers.

FAQ

Common questions.

What sources is the insurance data built from?

Public state regulatory sources — state Department of Insurance portals, SERFF filing access where public, and NAIC identifiers — normalized by jurisdiction.

Is one state's data national coverage?

No. State insurance records are jurisdiction-specific. One state's file is never extrapolated to national share or coverage.

Can I track rate filings by carrier?

Yes. Rate and form filings keep status, product, and effective date attached, scoped to the filing state.

How do I get access?

Access for competitor intelligence, regulatory monitoring, or bulk export is by request, priced so smaller teams can justify it.

Get access

Tell us what insurance data needs to do.

Competitor intelligence, regulatory monitoring, market sizing, or bulk export — share the workflow and we'll get you access, including custom cuts.

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