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  • Short-term insurance delivers mixed customer experience results, CE Index shows
  • Short-term insurance delivers mixed customer experience results, CE Index shows

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    The short-term insurance industry recorded a Customer Experience (CE) Index score of 69.5 in 2025, placing it behind banking (73.0) and life insurance (74.1), but slightly ahead of medical schemes (68.8), according to the 2025 CE Index for the Short-Term Insurance Industry.

    The results, compiled by Professor Adré Schreuder, Head of the Industry Chair in Customer Experience at the University of Pretoria (UP), are based on a national sample of 6,384 consumers across product and customer touchpoints. They show an industry that sits firmly in the middle of South Africa’s financial services landscape, performing well on some fundamentals, but still challenged by unresolved customer problems.

    “This is a highly contested industry with sophisticated brands investing heavily in systems, people, training, and processes,” says Schreuder.

    “The data shows us that short-term insurers have made significant strides in preventing problems and resolving complaints. However, inconsistency in resolving issues when things go wrong continues to have an outsized impact on customer experience and long-term loyalty.”

    Auto & General sets the pace for the industry

    The index assessed customer experience across a broad cross-section of South Africa’s short-term insurance market, including 1st for Women, Auto & General, Budget Insurance, Dialdirect, Discovery Insure, MiWay, Old Mutual Insure (OMI), Outsurance, Santam, and Virseker.

    The standout performer in the 2025 benchmark is Auto & General, which emerged as the overall industry leader across the CE Index model with a score of 73.7, supported by strong results across the quality of experience, value of experience, satisfaction, loyalty, and problem resolution. Second place overall was shared by Budget and Virseker, followed by Dialdirect and 1st for Women, signalling the strength of the direct-to-customer or non-intermediated segment.

    “We have not often seen this degree of separation between the leading brand and the industry average. Auto & General has attributed this performance to the tangible value of their customer-obsessed approach – one that prioritises operational excellence, builds trust, and delivers measurable impact across all customer touchpoints.”

    Beyond overall rankings, the index also provides insight into where insurers are differentiating themselves across specific parts of the customer journey. Dialdirect stood out as product category winner, with customers responding positively to the flexibility and simplicity of its offering. The brand also featured strongly on digital channels, sharing top digital performance with Budget.

    Auto & General’s lead was most evident in its contact centre performance, which it states reflects the impact of a customer-led culture designed to empower staff with the tools to listen deeply, adapt quickly, and connect authentically.

    Among broker-led insurers, Discovery and MiWay delivered the strongest broker channel experience, cementing their position in the intermediated segment.

    “Intermediated insurers operate under very different service and cost dynamics because of broker channels. As the market evolves, separating these benchmarks will give insurers and customers a clearer picture of who is genuinely delivering value,” he notes.

    Future editions of the CE Index are therefore likely to introduce separate benchmark categories for intermediated and non-intermediated insurers.

    Problem resolution remains a major risk

    At an industry level, only 7% of customers experienced a problem, well below the 10% international best-practice benchmark. Furthermore, 60% of issues were resolved to customers’ expectations, outperforming the global benchmark of 50%. However, 27% were only “somewhat resolved”, while 13% remained completely unresolved – a figure Schreuder says remains uncomfortably high. It is worth mentioning that Outsurance showed a 78% problem resolution.

    “Ideally, unresolved issues should sit below 5%. Anything above 10% creates a pool of upset customers, and those cases often escalate to the ombudsman. That is where reputational damage begins, especially since six insurers had non-resolution of higher than 10%.”

    In terms of what customers complained about most, 72% of problems related to functional performance and service delivery, with speed and accuracy as dominant drivers. “Nearly half of all complaints came down to how quickly something was handled, and whether it was done correctly the first time, pointing to basic execution failures,” he explains.

    Ironically, the same functional performance factors are also the single biggest drivers of loyalty when delivered well. “It’s interesting that the category that’s the number one cause of problems is also the number one category for making people loyal. That’s why getting the basics right is so important.”

    Converting intent to action

    Despite these execution gaps, the index shows that short-term insurers are converting customer goodwill into advocacy more effectively than other financial services sectors.

    In 2025, 41% of customers are classified as promoters based on the strength of their likelihood to recommend their insurer. Some 28% further reported actually recommending their insurer, resulting in an Intention-Behaviour (IB) Ratio of 68%, well ahead of medical schemes (60%), banking (42%), and life insurance (33%).

    Interestingly, some brands with lower Net Promoter Score (NPS) achieved high intent-to-action ratios above 70%, including Outsurance and OMI. By contrast, Auto & General achieved the highest Net Promoter Score of 33 but a lower conversion rate. 


    This reflects the growing practice of post-interaction nudging, where customers are directed to platforms such as HelloPeter to share positive reviews immediately after service engagements, says Schreuder. “This inflates advocacy signals. It boosts visible recommendation metrics, but does not necessarily reflect organic, voluntary advocacy.”

    Overall, the 2025 CE Index shows a short-term insurance industry that has strengthened its customer experience fundamentals, but one where execution gaps still undermine trust.

    “The takeaway for the industry is that customer experience depends on reliably delivering the basics – especially when something goes wrong. Resolving issues well, and consistently, is what ultimately protects trust and builds loyalty.”

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