Advisers predict health insurance spike in 2026 Mortgage Finance Gazette

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More than a third of advisers (37%) writing health insurance expect demand to increase in 2026, according to health and life insurer The Exeter.

That is a marked change from 2025, when over one in five advsiers anticipated a fall in demand (21%). Half of advisers expect demand to remain the same (50%).

Despite this confidence, advisers writing health insurance continue to face cost pressures.

Nearly four in ten cite the increased cost of doing business as their biggest challenge in 2026 (38%), up from 32% in 2025.

Pressure on consumer finances is also a key concern, highlighted by more than a quarter of advisers writing health insurance (28%).

Demand for both income protection and life insurance is expected to continue in 2026. More than half of advisers expect demand across both product lines to remain stable, with around a third anticipating growth.

However, advisers writing income protection and life insurance face similar challenges.

Rising business costs remain the top concern, averaging around 36% across both products. Affordability pressures for consumers also feature strongly, with around 30% highlighting financial strain as a barrier.

Regulatory change is another shared theme, highlighted by 32% of advisers across both products.

This reflects the FCA’s ongoing work, including the Pure Protection Market Study, expected to conclude in 2026.

The Exeter director of distribution and marketing Steve Bryan said: “Advisers are facing a combination of challenges at the moment, from rising costs within their own businesses to ongoing affordability pressures for their clients, and that’s not something to underestimate. What’s encouraging, though, is they continue to adapt and find ways through those challenges, keeping insurance firmly on the agenda.

“We’re seeing that particularly in health insurance, where confidence in demand remains high as advisers respond to ongoing concerns around access to care and treatment waiting times.”