[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
insurance mediation uk

Mediating International Insurance & Reinsurance Disputes in the UK: a Practical Guide for Counsel & Claims Teams (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: 3 July 2026

Insurance mediation in the UK has moved from a “nice‑to‑have” option to a strategic imperative. Between 2024 and 2026, a wave of ADR‑related regulatory updates, including strengthened Civil Procedure Rules (CPR) prompts to mediate, revised consumer ADR obligations, and increasingly firm judicial messaging on costs sanctions for unreasonable refusal, has reshaped how insurers and reinsurers approach dispute resolution. This guide serves as a practitioner playbook for in‑house claims directors, general counsel and insurance litigation teams who need to decide whether to mediate, how to design a mediation strategy, and what to draft into contracts and settlement documents to make outcomes stick across borders.

  • Key takeaway 1. Courts in England and Wales now actively scrutinise whether parties have engaged with mediation, refusal carries a real risk of adverse costs orders.
  • Key takeaway 2. A well‑drafted mediation clause in insurance and reinsurance contracts can save months of litigation and preserve commercial relationships along the market chain.
  • Key takeaway 3. Mediated settlement enforcement options have expanded: consent orders, conversion to arbitral awards, and, for qualifying international agreements, the Singapore Convention on Mediation all offer routes to make settlements binding and executable.

Why Use Insurance Mediation in the UK?

Insurance dispute mediation offers distinct advantages over litigation or arbitration in the right circumstances. Speed is chief among them: a typical one‑ or two‑day commercial mediation can resolve disputes that would otherwise consume twelve to thirty‑six months in court. Costs savings are equally significant, mediator fees and preparation expenses represent a fraction of full trial costs. Crucially, mediation is confidential, which matters enormously to insurers guarding claims data, reserving strategies and market reputation.

Beyond efficiency, mediation preserves ongoing commercial relationships. In the London Market and across international reinsurance programmes, cedants, reinsurers and brokers frequently trade together on multiple programmes. A litigated dispute that produces a public judgment can poison those relationships for years. Mediation allows parties to explore creative settlement structures, phased payments, policy amendments, future premium adjustments, that a court cannot order.

That said, insurance claims mediation in the UK is not suitable for every dispute. Where a binding precedent is needed on a novel policy‑wording question, or where fraud is alleged, mediation alone may not serve the parties’ interests. The key is to conduct a realistic triage early.

When Mediation Is Especially Effective

  • Coverage allocation disputes involving multiple policy years, overlapping programmes and numerous subscribing insurers.
  • Business‑interruption and complex‑loss quantification cases where accounting and actuarial issues dominate and expert‑to‑expert dialogue can unlock agreement.
  • Multi‑party reinsurance disputes where cascading liabilities through retrocession spirals make bilateral negotiation unworkable.
  • Cross‑border matters where jurisdictional uncertainty about which court or tribunal has authority makes a consensual resolution particularly attractive.

Legal and Regulatory Context for Insurance Mediation in the UK

The regulatory framework governing commercial mediation in insurance matters operates at multiple levels. Understanding where formal obligations apply, and where they do not, is essential for any claims team evaluating a mediation strategy.

CPR and Court Prompts to Mediate

The Civil Procedure Rules govern litigation in England and Wales and contain an overriding objective, set out in CPR Part 1, that requires courts to deal with cases justly and at proportionate cost. This includes actively managing cases, which in practice means encouraging parties to use ADR procedures. Case management conferences routinely produce directions inviting, and in some procedural contexts effectively requiring, parties to attempt mediation before trial.

The landmark authority on unreasonable refusal remains Halsey v Milton Keynes General NHS Trust [2004] EWCA Civ 576. The Court of Appeal established that while the court cannot compel mediation (doing so would violate the right of access to the court), a party who unreasonably refuses to mediate may face adverse costs consequences, even if it wins on the merits. Factors the court considers include the nature of the dispute, the merits of the case, whether other settlement attempts have been made, the cost of mediation relative to the dispute value, any delay mediation would cause, and whether mediation had a reasonable prospect of success.

For insurance litigators, the practical effect is clear: document every response to a mediation invitation, explain any refusal in writing with reference to the Halsey factors, and keep that correspondence on file for the costs hearing.

Consumer ADR Rules and Insurance Sector Caveats

The Alternative Dispute Resolution for Consumer Disputes (Competent Authorities and Information) Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/542), as amended by SI 2015/1392, established a framework requiring traders (including insurers dealing with consumers) to inform consumers of available ADR bodies when a complaint cannot be resolved directly. While these regulations are primarily aimed at consumer‑facing transactions rather than large‑scale commercial insurance disputes, they remain relevant where policies are held by individual policyholders or small businesses. Claims teams dealing with retail lines should ensure their complaints processes reference an approved ADR body and comply with the information requirements.

Regulator Guidance: FCA and Financial Ombudsman

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) regulates conduct in insurance markets and expects firms to handle complaints fairly. The Financial Ombudsman Service operates as a statutory ADR body for eligible complainants in financial services, including insurance. For commercial parties, the Ombudsman’s jurisdiction is limited, but its existence shapes consumer expectations and provides a backdrop against which the courts assess the reasonableness of a party’s refusal to engage in other forms of ADR. Industry observers expect regulators to continue tightening expectations around early dispute resolution in insurance, making proactive mediation strategy a compliance consideration as well as a commercial one.

What Are Valid Reasons to Refuse Mediation?

Drawing on Halsey and subsequent authority, the following refusal grounds are most likely to withstand scrutiny:

  • The dispute raises a point of law or construction requiring judicial determination, for example, a novel policy‑wording issue where market certainty demands a binding precedent.
  • Fraud or dishonesty is alleged, mediation may be inappropriate where credibility findings are essential.
  • A previous mediation attempt failed and material circumstances have not changed.
  • The costs of mediation are disproportionate to the sums at stake.
  • Unreasonable delay would result, for example, where limitation is about to expire.

Regardless of the ground relied on, the refusal should be recorded in a detailed letter to the opposing party, filed with the litigation team, and retained for any future costs argument.

Designing a Mediation Strategy for Insurers and Reinsurers

Successful commercial mediation in insurance disputes is won or lost before the parties enter the room. A disciplined pre‑mediation process covers four areas: stakeholder mapping, risk assessment, timetable design and mediator selection.

Stakeholder Mapping and Authority to Settle

Insurance mediations frequently involve multiple stakeholders with overlapping, but not identical, commercial interests. Before agreeing to a mediation date, the lead insurer or cedant should map every party whose consent or financial contribution is needed to settle. This includes co‑insurers on a subscription slip, following‑market reinsurers, brokers who may face separate E&O claims, and any corporate parent whose board authority is required above a given reserve threshold.

Authority to settle is the single most common reason insurance mediations stall. Each party attending should confirm, in advance and in writing, the level of financial authority its representatives hold and the identity of any decision‑maker available by telephone if higher authority is needed during the day.

Case Management Timetable and Mediator Selection

A realistic timetable allows four to eight weeks between agreeing to mediate and the mediation day. This provides time for exchange of position papers (typically seven to fourteen days before the mediation), expert reports where relevant, and a pre‑mediation call between the mediator and each party’s counsel.

Mediator selection matters. In insurance disputes, mediators generally fall into one of four categories: (1) evaluative mediators, who offer views on merits and likely court outcomes; (2) facilitative mediators, who focus on process and help parties reach their own solutions; (3) sector‑specialist mediators with deep insurance or reinsurance market knowledge; and (4) institutional mediators appointed through bodies such as the ICC, LCIA or CEDR under their own procedural rules. For complex reinsurance mediation, a mediator with market knowledge and evaluative confidence is typically most effective.

Pre‑Mediation Checklist

Action Owner Evidence Needed
Identify all parties and confirm participation Lead counsel / claims director Signed mediation agreement; stakeholder map
Confirm authority to settle (amount and signatory) Each party’s GC or board delegate Written authority letter; escalation contacts
Prepare risk matrix and reserve analysis Claims team / actuarial Updated reserve schedule; scenario modelling
Select and appoint mediator Lead counsel (joint agreement) Mediator CV; fee agreement; conflict check
Exchange position papers Counsel 7–14 days pre‑mediation; paginated bundle
Draft settlement term sheet (template) Lead counsel Heads of terms template; enforcement clause options
Arrange logistics (venue, breakout rooms, tech) Solicitor / mediation coordinator Booking confirmation; video link credentials

How Much Does Mediation Cost in the UK?

Costs vary with dispute complexity and mediator seniority. As a rough guide, mediator fees for a one‑day commercial mediation in insurance matters typically range from £3,000 to £15,000 per party (plus VAT), depending on the mediator’s experience, the number of parties and the venue. Institutional mediation (through the ICC or LCIA) carries additional administrative fees. Even at the upper end, these costs represent a small fraction of the expense of a multi‑week trial with expert witnesses.

Drafting and Negotiating Mediation Clauses for Insurance Contracts

A well‑crafted mediation clause in insurance contracts removes ambiguity about when and how mediation is triggered, what rules govern the process, and how confidentiality and privilege are protected. The following templates illustrate two common approaches.

Sample Clause A: Mandatory Staged Mediation Before Litigation or Arbitration

“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this contract, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall first be referred to mediation in accordance with the CEDR Model Mediation Procedure. If the dispute is not settled within 60 calendar days of the commencement of the mediation (or such further period as the parties may agree in writing), either party may commence proceedings by litigation [or arbitration] in London, England.”

This clause creates a condition precedent to litigation. Courts have generally upheld such clauses provided they are sufficiently certain, specifying the mediation body, the time limit, and the seat. Claims teams should note that an inadequately drafted clause (vague language such as “the parties may consider mediation”) is unlikely to be enforced as a mandatory step.

Sample Clause B: Optional Mediation With Arbitration Fallback

“Either party may at any time propose mediation of any dispute arising under this contract. If both parties agree, the mediation shall be conducted in London under the ICC Mediation Rules. If the dispute is not resolved within 45 calendar days of the mediator’s appointment, or if either party declines to mediate, the dispute shall be finally resolved by arbitration under the LCIA Rules, with the seat in London and the tribunal consisting of three arbitrators.”

This structure preserves flexibility: mediation is encouraged but not mandatory, and a clear arbitration fallback ensures finality. For cross‑border insurance mediation, specifying an institutional mediation body (ICC mediation insurance disputes are common) gives parties a recognised procedural framework and assists enforcement.

Clause Drafting Pitfalls

  • Do not use vague aspirational language (“the parties shall endeavour to resolve…”), it is unenforceable.
  • Do not omit a time limit for the mediation phase, open‑ended obligations create tactical delay.
  • Do not forget choice of law and seat provisions, these determine which court supervises the clause.
  • Do not neglect confidentiality and privilege language, the clause should expressly state that all communications during mediation are without prejudice and confidential.
  • Do not assume a mediation clause covers reinsurance disputes automatically, retrocession contracts and facultative certificates should contain their own dispute resolution provisions.

Enforcing Mediated Settlements and Cross‑Border Issues

A mediated settlement is, at its core, a contract. Ensuring it can be enforced, especially across jurisdictions, requires careful structuring at the point of settlement. Mediated settlement enforcement in insurance matters typically follows one of three routes.

Enforcement Routes: Comparison Table

Route When to Use Pros and Cons
Consent order (UK court) / Tomlin order All parties are in England/Wales and want court‑sanctioned closure with a stay of proceedings + Fast to obtain; judicial oversight; breach enforceable as contempt. Requires existing court proceedings; limited cross‑border reach without separate recognition proceedings
Convert settlement to arbitral award (by consent) Parties already have an arbitration clause or agree to appoint an arbitrator to record the settlement as an award + Enforceable in 170+ states under the New York Convention; powerful international reach. Additional cost of arbitrator appointment; both parties must consent; some jurisdictions scrutinise “consent awards”
Singapore Convention on Mediation (UN) Parties have a qualifying international settlement agreement resulting from mediation and relevant states are Contracting Parties + Direct enforcement without converting to judgment or award; designed specifically for mediated settlements. Limited to Contracting States; the UK’s status under the Convention must be confirmed; excludes settlements already enforceable as judgments or awards

Deciding Between Arbitral Award Conversion and Consent Order

The decision depends on where enforcement will be needed. If the paying party has assets only in England and Wales, a Tomlin order provides the simplest and cheapest route. If assets are spread across multiple jurisdictions, common in international reinsurance, converting the settlement into an arbitral award and relying on the New York Convention provides enforcement reach in over 170 states. The Singapore Convention on Mediation offers a third pathway for qualifying international settlements, though its practical utility currently depends on whether the relevant states are signatories. Industry observers expect adoption to expand, making this an option worth building into settlement documentation now.

Multi‑Party and Reinsurance‑Specific Mechanics

Reinsurance mediation introduces layers of complexity absent from bilateral disputes. The reinsurance chain, from policyholder through direct insurer, reinsurer and retrocessionaire, means that a settlement at one level may have cascading financial consequences up and down the programme.

Practical Steps for Reinsurers

  • Notification. Ensure all reinsurers on the programme are notified of the mediation and given the opportunity to participate. Failure to notify can create coverage disputes about the binding effect of any settlement on follow‑on reinsurance recoveries.
  • Reserve coordination. Each reinsurer should update reserves in advance, with actuarial support where necessary. The mediator will need to understand the total financial exposure across the programme to facilitate realistic settlement discussions.
  • Confidentiality across panels. Where multiple reinsurer panels are involved, agree a multi‑party confidentiality protocol before the mediation. This protocol should specify which information may be shared across caucus groups and what remains ring‑fenced.
  • Allocation protocol. Agree in advance how any settlement sum will be allocated across policy years, layers and participating reinsurers. An allocation mechanism (e.g., ILU/IUA allocation clauses, or a bespoke protocol) should be attached to the settlement agreement.

Multi‑Party Mediation Timeline

  1. Week 1–2: Stakeholder identification and mediation agreement circulation.
  2. Week 3–4: Position paper exchange; pre‑mediation calls between mediator and each party.
  3. Week 5–6: Joint opening session, followed by caucuses (multiple rounds). In complex matters, schedule two consecutive mediation days.
  4. Day of or Day +1: Heads of terms signed; settlement agreement finalised within 14 days.

Conduct, Privilege and Evidence: What to Say and Not Say

Mediation communications in England and Wales are protected by the “without prejudice” rule, which prevents statements made in genuine settlement negotiations from being adduced as evidence in subsequent proceedings. This protection is fundamental to the candour that makes insurance mediation effective, but it is not absolute.

The principal exceptions are: (1) where both parties consent to waive privilege; (2) where there is evidence of fraud, misrepresentation or undue influence; and (3) for the purpose of enforcing or interpreting a concluded settlement agreement. Claims teams should instruct all attendees on these boundaries before the mediation day.

What Not to Say at Mediation

  • Do not make unqualified admissions of liability, preface any concession with “without prejudice” and “for the purposes of this mediation only.”
  • Do not disclose reserve figures unless this is a deliberate tactical decision, reserves are commercially sensitive and, if disclosed carelessly, may be used to anchor expectations.
  • Do not make threats about regulatory complaints or public disclosure, these undermine the collaborative atmosphere and may amount to “without prejudice abuse.”
  • Do prepare a clear opening statement that frames the dispute constructively and signals willingness to engage.
  • Do ensure the settlement agreement is drafted in the room (or shortly after) and signed before parties leave, verbal agreements are difficult to enforce.

Case Studies: Worked Examples

Case Study 1: Insurer v Insurer Coverage Mediation

Two London Market insurers disputed coverage under a professional indemnity programme following a large claim by a professional services firm. The underlying claim involved allegations of negligent advice spanning three policy years. The lead insurer argued the claim attached to Year 1; the second insurer maintained it fell to Year 3 under an aggregation clause. After eighteen months of correspondence and a failed Part 36 offer, the parties agreed to a one‑day mediation with a sector‑specialist mediator. The mediator held separate caucuses focused on the construction of the aggregation wording and the financial exposure under each interpretation. The parties settled on an allocation of 60/40, with the settlement recorded as a Tomlin order in existing proceedings.

Total mediation costs were approximately £25,000, compared to estimated trial costs exceeding £400,000.

Case Study 2: Multi‑Party Reinsurance Allocation Mediation

A cedant and four treaty reinsurers disputed the allocation of a catastrophe loss across three successive treaty years. The reinsurers disagreed among themselves about whether the loss constituted one or multiple “occurrences” under the treaty wording. The cedant proposed a two‑day mediation with a mediator experienced in reinsurance allocation. Before the mediation, each reinsurer provided a confidential position paper; the mediator conducted individual pre‑mediation calls. On Day 1, a joint session established the factual matrix. On Day 2, the mediator shuttled between caucus rooms, presenting each party with a framework allocation model.

The parties reached agreement on a three‑way split and converted the settlement into an arbitral award by consent (appointing the mediator as arbitrator for the sole purpose of recording the award), allowing enforcement under the New York Convention against a reinsurer with assets outside the UK.

Practical Checklists and Downloadable Assets

Effective insurance mediation in the UK depends on disciplined preparation. The following resources are designed for claims teams and counsel preparing for mediation:

  • One‑Page Claims Team Checklist, a step‑by‑step preparation guide covering stakeholder identification, authority confirmation, risk matrix, document bundle, settlement template and post‑mediation actions.
  • Mediation Clause Library, a collection of tested clause templates for use in insurance and reinsurance contracts, including mandatory staged mediation, optional mediation with arbitration fallback, and multi‑party mediation protocols.

10 Steps to Prepare the Mediation Brief:

  1. Define the dispute issues in a single‑page summary.
  2. Identify every party whose participation is needed for a durable settlement.
  3. Confirm authority to settle (amount and signatory) in writing.
  4. Prepare a risk matrix: best case, worst case, likely outcome and litigation costs.
  5. Select a mediator with relevant sector experience and agree fees.
  6. Draft a concise, persuasive position paper (no more than 10 pages).
  7. Prepare a chronological bundle of key documents.
  8. Draft a skeleton settlement agreement and enforcement clause options.
  9. Brief all attendees on privilege rules, conduct expectations and opening statement.
  10. Arrange logistics: venue, breakout rooms, connectivity and catering for a long day.

Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps

Insurance mediation in the UK has become a core dispute resolution tool, not an afterthought. The 2024–2026 regulatory and judicial push towards ADR means that insurers and reinsurers who lack a coherent mediation strategy face cost penalties, commercial inefficiency and reputational exposure. Claims teams and counsel should take three immediate steps: review and update mediation clauses in current policy wordings and treaty programmes; build a pre‑mediation preparation protocol into the claims‑handling workflow; and ensure settlement agreements are structured for cross‑border enforcement from the outset. The practitioners listed in the Global Law Experts, United Kingdom lawyer directory can provide tailored guidance on all aspects of insurance and reinsurance mediation strategy.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Michel Kallipetis at Independent Mediators Limited, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. The Alternative Dispute Resolution for Consumer Disputes (Competent Authorities and Information) Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/542)
  2. The Alternative Dispute Resolution for Consumer Disputes (Amendment) Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/1392)
  3. Civil Procedure Rules 1998 (SI 1998/3132)
  4. Halsey v Milton Keynes General NHS Trust [2004] EWCA Civ 576
  5. United Nations Convention on International Settlement Agreements Resulting from Mediation (Singapore Convention)
  6. Financial Ombudsman Service, Alternative Dispute Resolution

FAQs

Is mediation mandatory in the UK?
Mediation is not compulsory as a matter of law. However, the Civil Procedure Rules require courts to encourage ADR, and the Court of Appeal in Halsey v Milton Keynes General NHS Trust [2004] EWCA Civ 576 established that unreasonable refusal to mediate can result in adverse costs orders, even for the winning party. In practice, this means insurers should treat mediation invitations seriously and document any refusal with clear reasons.
Yes. A mediated settlement is a binding contract and can be enforced through several routes: as a consent order or Tomlin order in English court proceedings; by conversion into an arbitral award enforceable under the New York Convention; or, for qualifying international settlements, under the Singapore Convention on Mediation.
Courts assess reasonableness by reference to factors identified in Halsey, including the nature of the dispute, the merits of the case, whether mediation has been tried before, cost proportionality and whether delay would result. A refusal grounded in one or more of these factors, and properly documented in correspondence, is more likely to be upheld.
Parties agree on a seat (commonly London), a governing law for the mediation agreement, and a set of procedural rules (institutional or ad hoc). The critical issue is enforcement of any resulting settlement in the jurisdictions where assets are located. Converting the settlement to an arbitral award provides the widest enforcement reach under the New York Convention.
Mediator fees for a one‑day commercial insurance mediation typically range from £3,000 to £15,000 per party, depending on mediator seniority and dispute complexity. Institutional mediation (e.g., ICC) involves additional administrative fees. Total costs remain a fraction of contested litigation expenses.
Avoid unqualified admissions of liability, disclosure of reserve figures without tactical intent, and threats about regulatory action or publicity. All statements should be prefaced as being made “without prejudice and for the purposes of this mediation only.”
Reinsurers should be notified and invited to participate as early as possible, ideally at the point the cedant agrees to mediate. Late joinder risks excluding reinsurers from settlement discussions that directly affect their financial exposure and may create disputes about whether a settlement is recoverable under the reinsurance contract.
Communications during mediation are protected by the “without prejudice” rule and cannot generally be used as evidence in subsequent proceedings. Exceptions include situations involving fraud, misrepresentation, or where both parties consent to disclosure. Parties should also ensure that the mediation agreement contains an express confidentiality clause.
By Dr. Hassan Elhais

posted 18 minutes ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Mediating International Insurance & Reinsurance Disputes in the UK: a Practical Guide for Counsel & Claims Teams (2026)

Send welcome message

Custom Message