Between 2017 and 2018, Costa Rica's fire and property casualty rates increased from 18% to 33% and from 29% to 37%, respectively.
The general industry accident rate, which measures the proportion of claims payment expenses to total policy income, also increased in the last two years, from 48% in 2017 to 51% in 2018.
Data from the General Insurance Superintendence (Sugese) detail that during 2018 $139 million were paid for fire policies, and insurance companies disbursed $45 million for accidents and losses, which is equivalent to 33%.
Income from voluntary insurance premiums grew by 25% compared to April 2015, due in most part to the increase in personal insurance.
From the quarterly report by the Superintendent of Insurance of Costa Rica:
"Revenues from voluntary insurance premiums increased by 25% in relation to April 2015, reaching ¢265 billion colones.The growth of this type of insurance remains one of the main driving forces, but its growth responds, on the one hand, to an increase of ¢ 38.6 billion colones in the SOA, since RT premiums decreased by ¢12.9 billion colones.
Low-cost auto insurance policies are rapidly expanding the insurance culture in sectors of the population who can not access traditional policies.
Since the opening up of the national insurance market in 2008 and the incursion of microinsurance in 2010, 64 different types of products have been created. With low premiums as an incentive, in 2013 only 550,000 contracts were placed, representing 26% of all contracts sold by insurance companies in the country that year.
The Instituto Nacional de Seguros will provide $43 million in insurance for a hydroelectric project in Nicaragua, through reinsurance services.
The Hidropantasma Hydroelectric Project in Jinotega is based on Costa Rican, Panamanian and Honduran capital, and the policy with which the INS will cover it is "All Risks Fire - Dollars".
Costa Rican laws prevent the INS operating across borders.