Insurance Age - Top 50 Brokers in Personal Lines 2019
Articles in this issue
Top 50 2019 - Welcome
Still growing: The Top 50 Personal Lines Brokers have seen many acquisitions and continued growth over the last year
Top 50 2019 - Bandings
Top 50 listing - Brokers are listed alphabetically in bands of GWP
Top 50 2019 - State of the market
Is the forecast for personal lines changing? Acquisitions and uncertainty over the Ogden rate drove developments in personal lines this year
Top 50 2019 - Rules of engagement
The criteria we used to determine this year’s Top 50 brokers in personal lines after applications
Top 50 2019 - £1bn plus
Hastings Direct (Hastings Insurance Services)
Top 50 2019 - £500m-£999.99m
Atlanta
Top 50 2019 - £250m-£499.99m
AA Insurance Services • Adrian Flux Insurance • A-Plan Group
Top 50 2019 - £150m-£249.99m
Eldon Insurance • One Call Insurance Services
Top 50 2019 - £100m-£149.99m
Complete Cover Group Limited & Hyperformance • Granite Group (Acorn Insurance & Financial Services) • Markerstudy Group – Retail and Affinity • Vantage Holdings
Top 50 2019 - £75m-£99.99m
Abbey Insurance Brokers • Be Wiser Insurance • MCE Insurance • Staysure
Top 50 2019 - £50m-£74.99m
Aston Lark • Brightside Insurance Services • Devitt • Grove & Dean • Howden UK • Hughes Insurance • Premium Choice Insurance • QMetric Group
Top 50 2019 - £25m-£49.99m
Alan Boswell Group • AllClear • Autoline Insurance • Avantia Insurance • Carrot Insurance • Dayinsure.com • Higos Insurance Services • Hood Group • TempCover
Top 50 2019 - £20m-£24.99m
Academy Insurance • Caravan Guard • Ceta Insurance • SEIB Insurance Brokers
Top 50 2019 - £15m-£19.99m
Aon UK • Lifesure • Lycett Holdings • Principal Insurance • Sutton Winson
Top 50 2019 - Under £15m
ICB Group / Finch Insurance Brokers (Verlingue UK) • Kerr Group Insurance • Laurie Ross Insurance • P J Hayman & Company • Ryan’s • Saffron Insurance Services
Top 50 2019 - Provider perspective
How the comeback of the milkman could help brokers: Increasingly ethical consumers have revived the fortunes of the milkman and could help brokers with a social conscience to thrive, writes Michael Lawrence