Post-Loss Placement & Renewal Loss Runs · Loss Control · Re-Quote

Drone Light Show Insurance After A Claim

A claim does not end a drone show operator's career. It changes the placement strategy. The first 72 hours after a loss shape what the next renewal looks like more than any other window of time. The right notifications, the right documentation, the right loss control improvements built into operations after the loss — all of these become the package that gets re-quoted at specialty markets when the incumbent carrier non-renews. The path through this is broker-mediated, slower than a clean placement, and almost always achievable.

PREMIUM IMPACT AGING CURVE · LOSS RUNS LOOKBACK 5 YEARS +80% +60% +30% +10% +0% YEAR 1 YEAR 2 YEAR 3 YEAR 4 YEAR 5 +50–80% +30–50% +15–30% +5–15% ~Baseline FALLS OFF Illustrative impact on a moderate single-event claim. Mass-loss and bodily-injury claims age more slowly.
5 Years Standard Loss Runs Lookback
First 72 Hours Decide Most Claim Outcomes
+20–80% Typical Premium Impact By Severity
Surplus + Lloyd's Markets Built For Post-Loss Risk

What Type Of Claim Are We Dealing With

Carriers do not treat all claims equally. A small in-flight battery fire that destroyed two drones with no third-party damage is rated differently than a 200-drone cascade event with property damage. A spectator-injury claim with paid medical and a small settlement is rated differently than a wrongful death lawsuit. A fly-away that ended in an empty field is rated differently than a fly-away that struck a vehicle on a highway. The placement strategy depends entirely on which severity tier the loss falls into.

The diagram below shows the severity ladder underwriters use, the typical premium impact at each tier, and where each tier sits in terms of placement difficulty. Operators who can identify their own loss in the right tier can frame realistic expectations for the next renewal — and engage with brokers in a way that gets the placement moving rather than wasted on markets that will never write the risk.

The Claim Severity Ladder

Five severity tiers, ranked by underwriting impact. Each tier corresponds to a different placement strategy and a different realistic premium expectation at renewal. The ladder is not a verdict — it is a planning tool.

CLAIM SEVERITY LADDER · UNDERWRITING IMPACT BY TIER TIER · CLAIM TYPE EXAMPLE PREMIUM IMPACT DIFFICULTY TIER 1 · LOW Minor hull only Single-drone loss, no third-party damage Battery failure, prop strike, in-storage damage +0–10% EASY TIER 2 · MOD Multi-drone loss 10–50 drones lost in a single event Formation collision, weather excursion, fly-away +15–30% MODERATE TIER 3 · HIGH Mass loss + property 100+ drones cascade, property damage involved RTK base failure, software bug cascade, vehicle/building damage +30–50% HARD TIER 4 · SEVERE Bodily injury claim Spectator or third-party injury, medical costs paid Falling drone laceration, head injury, settled or pending claim +50–80% VERY HARD TIER 5 · CAT Catastrophic / WD Wrongful death, FAA enforcement, criminal proceedings Severe injury settlement, FAA suspension, willful misconduct findings +80–200% SPECIALTY ONLY Premium impacts are illustrative ranges from clean-risk baseline; actual underwriting depends on operator profile and remediation.

A few patterns worth understanding from the ladder. Tier 1 and Tier 2 claims often renew at the incumbent carrier with a single-cycle premium increase; Tier 3 frequently triggers non-renewal but is placeable at the same broker with no significant gap in coverage. Tier 4 and Tier 5 require specialty markets — surplus, Lloyd's, or hybrid programs — and the placement timeline extends to four to eight weeks. The most consequential decision an operator makes after a Tier 3+ claim is which broker to engage; the broker's specialty market access defines what is actually placeable.

The First 72 Hours After A Claim

Most claim outcomes are decided in the first 72 hours after the loss event. The actions taken in this window — notifications made, documentation preserved, statements given or not given, evidence secured — shape both the current claim's outcome and the operator's renewal posture for years afterward. The cards below cover the actions every drone show operator should take in the immediate aftermath of a loss.

First 1 Hour

Stabilize The Scene

  • Stop the show immediately if injuries occurred
  • Provide first aid, call 911 for any injury
  • Secure the affected area to prevent further injury
  • Recover downed drones; preserve all hardware
  • Do not modify, repair, or dispose of damaged drones
  • Photograph the scene from multiple angles
  • Note time of incident, weather conditions, audience location
First 4 Hours

Document & Witness

  • Identify all witnesses, capture contact information
  • Preserve telemetry data from GCS and RTK base
  • Save show software logs and choreography files
  • Document weather observations and any abort calls considered
  • Record names of crew members on duty during the event
  • Do not delete, modify, or overwrite any electronic records
  • Avoid public statements about cause or fault
First 24 Hours

Notify The Carrier

  • Provide First Notice Of Loss to broker and carrier
  • Submit time, location, persons involved, basic facts only
  • Avoid speculation about cause in the FNOL
  • Notify additional insureds (venue, production company, league)
  • Notify FAA if injury, fatality, or significant property damage occurred
  • Engage legal counsel before any recorded statement
  • Suspend social media posting about the event
First 48 Hours

Preserve Evidence

  • Hold all damaged drones in chain-of-custody storage
  • Backup GCS and RTK telemetry to multiple media
  • Save all comms recordings if recorded
  • Document the show plan as it existed at time of incident
  • Identify and retain copies of all software versions in use
  • Preserve venue contracts, COIs, and additional insured documentation
  • Document fleet photos from before the show as a baseline
First 72 Hours

Begin Remediation Planning

  • Identify the failure mode (RTK, software, weather, pilot, etc.)
  • Begin drafting loss control improvements that address the cause
  • Document any safety changes implemented immediately
  • Assess upcoming show calendar — proceed, pause, or cancel
  • Coordinate with broker on FAA notification requirements
  • Draft factual incident summary for renewal underwriters
  • Begin internal incident review with full crew
Days 4–14

Build The Renewal Story

  • Complete root cause analysis with documented findings
  • Implement loss control improvements; document with dates
  • Update written SOPs to reflect new procedures
  • Plan post-incident training for crew on revised SOPs
  • Begin gathering letters of support from production partners
  • Engage broker in pre-renewal market conversations
  • Avoid statements that prejudice the underlying claim

Just Had A Claim?

If you are within the first 72 hours of a loss event, the actions you take right now matter more than anything else for both the current claim and your next renewal. Send the FNOL details to KIG's specialty desk and we will help you map the post-loss strategy — what to document, what to preserve, what to say, and what not to say.

Reading Your Own Loss Runs

A loss run is the carrier's official record of every claim made, paid, or reserved on the policy over a defined period — typically five years. Specialty aviation underwriters request loss runs on every renewal and on every new submission with prior coverage. Operators should request copies of their own loss runs annually and read them line by line. The table below shows what each column actually means and what the underwriter is looking for in each one.

Column What It Shows What Underwriters Look For Operator Action
Claim Number Carrier's internal claim file ID Cross-references to claim file for details Verify accuracy
Date Of Loss When the underlying incident occurred Recency and aging within 5-year window Confirm accurate
Cause / Description Brief carrier-written summary of incident Severity classification and cause pattern Request rewrite if inaccurate
Status Open, Closed, Reopened, or Reserved Open claims signal ongoing exposure Push for closure on stale claims
Paid Amount Total dollars actually paid out Severity proxy and reserve accuracy Verify accurate
Reserved Amount Carrier's estimate of future payout Forward-looking exposure on open claims Request reduction if remediation completed
Recovery / Subrogation Money recovered from third parties Net cost to carrier after recoveries Document if subrogation pending
Net Loss Paid + Reserved minus Recovery The number that drives rating impact This is the rating number

Operators should never see their loss runs for the first time during a renewal submission. Two months before renewal, request the loss runs from the incumbent carrier, read them carefully, and challenge any inaccuracies. Open claims with stale reserves are the single biggest preventable contributor to renewal premium increases — push the carrier to either close the file or reduce the reserve to reflect the actual remaining exposure. The numbers on the loss runs become the numbers the next underwriter rates against.

Loss Control Improvements That Move The Quote

After a loss, the single largest controllable factor in the renewal premium is documented loss control. Underwriters discount risks where the operator has identified the failure mode, implemented concrete improvements, and can demonstrate that the same loss could not occur the same way again. Loss control "promises" without documentation and dates carry no weight; loss control with implementation dates, training records, and revised SOPs is the entire conversation.

Redundant RTK Base Stations

High Weight

After a single-RTK failure, deploying two or three RTK base stations in mutually-corrected configuration so any single base failure does not cascade. Document station configuration, network architecture, and failover testing.

Two-Pilot Operation

High Weight

Operating with a primary RPIC and a secondary pilot monitoring telemetry, ready to take control of subsets of the fleet in fail-safe scenarios. Common in larger operations now; documented as an SOP change after pilot-overload incidents.

Sub-Fleet Geofencing

High Weight

Geofencing the fleet into smaller sub-units (50–100 drones each) with independent fail-safes so a software error cannot cascade across the entire swarm. The "bubble, soft, hard" geofence layering pattern documented as standard procedure post-loss.

Pre-Show Failure Mode Rehearsal

Moderate Weight

Adding a pre-show rehearsal step where the crew runs through fail-safe scenarios (RTK loss, comms loss, geofence breach) and verifies the response. Documented in pre-flight checklist with crew sign-off.

Tighter Weather Abort Thresholds

Moderate Weight

After a weather-cause loss, lowering the wind, ceiling, or visibility abort thresholds in the show plan. Documented as updated SOP with quantitative trigger values, signed by the lead RPIC at every show.

Increased Spectator Standoff

Moderate Weight

After a spectator-injury claim, increasing the minimum horizontal standoff between the show flight envelope and the audience. Documented with site diagrams, venue communication, and crew briefing materials.

Battery Storage Containment

Moderate Weight

After a battery-fire loss, upgrading storage and charging area to fire-rated containers, dedicated fire suppression, and segmented charging zones. Document the upgrade with photos, specifications, and fire marshal review if applicable.

Software Vendor Audit & Switch

Variable

After a software-cause loss, conducting a formal review of the show software vendor and either switching platforms or implementing additional verification steps. Document any vendor change, version controls, and pre-show software validation procedures.

Pilot Recurrent Training

Lower Weight

After a pilot-error loss, instituting documented recurrent training for all RPICs — simulator hours, classroom modules, scenario-based testing. Track training completion in personnel files and reference in the renewal submission.

The most credible loss control package after a loss is the one that directly addresses the failure mode of the actual incident. Generic improvements ("we now train more") are weak. Targeted improvements ("after our RTK cascade event in March 2024, we deployed three redundant RTK base stations and revised our SOP to require failover verification before show start; the change is documented in SOP version 3.2 dated April 2024") are what move underwriter pricing.

When The Carrier Pursues Subrogation

Subrogation is the carrier's legal right to recover what they paid out by suing the third party actually responsible for the loss. For a drone show operator, this most often means the carrier paying the claim and then pursuing recovery against the show software vendor, the drone manufacturer, or another contractor whose error contributed to the loss. Subrogation is generally good news for the operator — recoveries reduce the net loss on the loss runs, which improves the renewal premium.

SUBROGATION FLOW · CARRIER RECOVERY AGAINST THIRD PARTIES LOSS EVENT Drone fleet damaged Software bug suspected CARRIER PAYS Operator's hull claim indemnified CAUSE INVESTIGATION Forensic analysis identifies software vendor at fault SUBROGATION FILED Carrier vs. software vendor Product liability theory RECOVERY Vendor or vendor's insurer pays settlement to carrier LOSS RUNS UPDATED Net loss reduced by recovery Renewal rating improves OPERATOR ACTION Preserve evidence · Cooperate with carrier subrogation team · Do not waive subrogation rights without consent

Two practical points operators should know. First, the operator's hull or aviation policy almost always preserves the carrier's subrogation rights — meaning the operator cannot independently settle with the software vendor or drone manufacturer in a way that releases the carrier's recovery rights. Doing so without the carrier's written consent can void the operator's coverage. Second, signing software vendor agreements that contain subrogation waivers can prejudice the carrier's recovery rights and may itself be a coverage issue. Operators should run vendor agreements past the broker before signing.

How Premium Recovers When Loss Control Is Documented

The chart below compares two paths through the post-loss period for an identical operator with an identical loss. The blue path shows premium impact when the operator implements documented loss control improvements and presents them at each renewal. The red path shows premium impact for the same operator who carries the loss without implementing documented changes. The two paths diverge sharply by year three.

RENEWAL PREMIUM PATH · WITH vs. WITHOUT DOCUMENTED LOSS CONTROL +50% +30% +15% +5% ±0 -10% LOSS RENEWAL 1 RENEWAL 2 RENEWAL 3 RENEWAL 4 +50% +38% +22% +8% ±0 WITH documented LC +40% +34% +30% +28% WITHOUT no documented LC Illustrative paths from a Tier 3 mass-loss event; specific numbers vary by operator profile and market conditions.

By renewal year four, the gap between the two paths represents the entire annual program cost difference for the operator who invested in documented loss control. For a $150,000 annual program, that gap is roughly $40,000 to $50,000 per year — money that flows directly to the bottom line. The investment in documenting and implementing loss control after a loss is one of the highest-return actions an operator can take.

Renewal Coming Up After A Loss?

If your renewal is within 90 days and you have a loss on the runs, the time to engage is now. KIG's specialty desk handles post-loss renewal placements through specialty aviation, surplus, and Lloyd's markets. Send the loss runs, the incident summary, and the documented loss control improvements — we will route the file to markets actively writing post-loss drone show risks.

Drone Light Show Insurance After A Claim — Frequently Asked Questions

Will my carrier non-renew me after a single claim?
It depends on severity. Tier 1 and Tier 2 claims (small hull losses, small multi-drone losses with no third-party involvement) usually renew with the incumbent carrier at a single-cycle premium increase. Tier 3 claims (mass loss, property damage) often trigger non-renewal but are placeable through the same broker at a different specialty market. Tier 4 and Tier 5 claims (bodily injury, wrongful death, FAA enforcement) almost always force a market change and require specialty placement.
How long does a claim stay on my loss runs?
Standard underwriting practice is a 5-year loss run lookback. Most claims age out of underwriting consideration after 5 years, though catastrophic claims and claims involving wrongful death or FAA enforcement may remain rateable longer. The premium impact of any single claim peaks in the first renewal cycle and decays in subsequent renewals — by year three to five, most claims are pricing-neutral if no further losses occur.
Should I delay submitting an FNOL to avoid hurting my renewal?
No. Delayed FNOL is a coverage issue under most aviation policies and can void coverage on the underlying claim. Late notice is also one of the most damaging signals an operator can send to a carrier — it suggests poor risk management and creates claim handling friction that escalates costs. The right move is timely notification followed by careful claim handling, not delayed notification.
Can I get insurance if I have an open claim?
Yes, in most cases, but the open claim is part of the underwriting picture and the new carrier will know about it. Specialty markets writing post-loss drone show risks accept open claims as part of the loss runs, with the reserved amount counting toward severity assessment. Operators should not attempt to hide open claims — they will be discovered through loss runs or background checks, and undisclosed open claims can void coverage when discovered.
Will an FAA enforcement action prevent renewal?
It depends on the action's status and severity. An FAA inquiry that is closed with no findings of violation is typically not a barrier to renewal. An ongoing inquiry that has not yet been resolved creates uncertainty that some carriers will not bind through. A formal violation, civil penalty, or waiver suspension changes the placement strategy substantially and pushes the file to specialty markets with experience handling FAA-action accounts. Specialty brokers have placement paths through these scenarios.
What if my claim was caused by software or hardware, not pilot error?
The cause classification matters at two levels. For the operator's renewal, software or hardware causes that are not within the operator's control are sometimes underwritten more favorably than pilot-error causes — particularly when the operator has documented the vendor switch or hardware upgrade made in response. For the carrier's loss runs, software and hardware causes often trigger subrogation against the vendor or manufacturer, which reduces the net loss and can improve future rating. Document the cause carefully and preserve evidence.
How much will my renewal premium increase after a Tier 3 mass-loss event?
For a clean operator before the loss, a Tier 3 mass-loss event typically produces a 30–50% premium increase at the first renewal, declining to 15–25% by year two and to 5–15% by year three if no further losses occur. The figures assume the operator is placed at a specialty market willing to write the post-loss risk and has documented loss control improvements. Without documented loss control, the increases stay elevated for longer and may force successive market changes.
Should I avoid filing small claims to keep my loss runs clean?
Generally no, but with nuance. Filing a small claim that is below your deductible is pointless — there is nothing for the carrier to pay and the claim still appears on the loss runs. Filing a small claim that exceeds the deductible is sometimes worth absorbing internally if the cost is low and the renewal impact would be material; this is a judgment call best discussed with the broker before filing. For any claim involving third-party injury or property damage, file regardless of size — the legal exposure outweighs the rating impact.
Will my hull policy cover damage caused by a software vendor's bug?
Hull responds to physical damage regardless of cause, in most properly written drone show hull policies. The interesting layer is subrogation — if the software vendor's bug caused the loss, the hull carrier may pursue product liability recovery against the vendor. The operator gets paid promptly; the carrier and vendor's insurer fight over who ultimately bears the loss. Operators should preserve all software logs, version records, and vendor communications to support potential subrogation.
Does a venue dropping me after a claim affect my insurance renewal?
Indirectly. Underwriters do not directly rate based on whether a venue continues working with the operator, but a pattern of venue cancellations after a claim can signal reputation issues that affect renewal capacity. More commonly, the venue drop affects the operator's revenue base and show calendar, which changes the underwriting profile (fewer shows = lower exposure, but also potentially lower limit requirements that change the premium math). Letters of support from continuing production partners help the renewal narrative.
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