January 22, 2026
Funds held is a key feature of reinsurance agreements that determines how cash moves between insurers and reinsurers. It can affect liquidity, alter investment income, and change collateral needs in ways that matter for both parties. Its impact is especially noticeable in quota share treaties, where premium and loss activity is more consistent. Understanding why funds held play such a central role helps make the rest of the structure far easier to follow.
Funds held reinsurance is when the ceding insurer keeps the premiums that would normally be paid to the reinsurer, instead of transferring the cash immediately.
In quota share reinsurance, things are more consistent.
Funds held will simplify this process because only the net amount is settled periodically.
This reduces friction and collateral needs. If a reinsurer’s share of premium is $10m, the cedant may hold that $10m and credit interest, instead of wiring it out and then requesting reimbursement for losses later.
Funds held would be less common in an excess of loss treaty because while premiums are usually fixed and paid upfront, losses are also infrequent and large. It may still be used as collateral in excess of loss treaty agreements if the reinsurer is offshore, or the cedant wants collateral for recoverables.
To compensate the cedant for acquisition costs and overhead, the reinsurer will also pay a ceding commission. The ceding insurer will treat this as income, while the reinsurer will treat this as expense. The ceding commission is typically recognized in proportion to the ceded written premium.
We can look at a scenario and see the impact of how that looks on the face of the financials for both a ceding insurer and their insurer.
A ceding insurer enters into a 40% quota share treaty. During the first quarter:
Under a funds‑held arrangement, the cedant keeps the $10 million of ceded premium instead of sending it to the reinsurer. As losses occur, the cedant deducts the reinsurer’s share from the funds‑held balance.
The entries for the ceding insurer are as follows:
|
Entry |
Account Name |
Debit |
Credit |
|
Direct Premium |
Cash/Premium receivable |
25,000,000 |
|
|
|
Gross written premium |
|
25,000,000 |
|
Direct Losses |
Losses |
4,000,000 |
|
|
|
Losses payable |
|
4,000,000 |
|
Ceded Premiums |
Ceded Premium |
10,000,000 |
|
|
|
Funds held liability |
|
10,000,000 |
|
Losses recovered |
Funds held liability |
1,600,000 |
|
|
|
Losses recoverable |
|
1,600,000 |
|
Interest income |
Interest credited to reinsurer |
100,000 |
|
|
|
Funds held liability |
|
100,000 |
|
Commission income |
Funds held liability |
1,000,000 |
|
|
|
Ceding commission income |
|
1,000,000 |
The impact to the funds held liability on the cedant financial statements are as follows:
|
Description |
Amount |
|
Ceded premium |
10,000,000 |
|
Less: |
|
|
Ceding commission |
(1,000,000) |
|
Losses recoverable |
(1,600,000) |
|
Plus: |
|
|
Interest credited |
100,000 |
|
Ending balance |
7,500,000
|
The entries for the reinsurer are as follows:
|
Entry |
Account Name |
Debit |
Credit |
|
Direct Premium |
N/A |
|
|
|
Direct Losses |
N/A |
|
|
|
Ceded Premiums |
Funds held receivable |
10,000,000 |
|
|
|
Assumed premium |
|
10,000,000 |
|
Losses recovered |
Losses assumed |
1,600,000 |
|
|
|
Funds held receivable |
|
1,600,000 |
|
Interest income |
Funds held receivable |
100,000 |
|
|
|
Interest income |
|
100,000 |
|
Commission income |
Ceding commission expense |
1,000,000 |
|
|
|
Funds held receivable |
|
1,000,000 |
The impact to the funds held receivable on the reinsurer financial statements are as follows:
|
Description |
Amount |
|
Assumed premium |
10,000,000 |
|
Less: |
|
|
Ceding commission |
(1,000,000) |
|
Losses recoverable |
(1,600,000) |
|
Plus: |
|
|
Interest credited |
100,000 |
|
Ending balance |
7,500,000 |
In summary, funds held is a reinsurance arrangement where the ceding insurer keeps the reinsurer’s share of premium instead of sending it immediately. The reinsurer records the amount as an asset, and the cedent hold sit as a liability.
Reinsurers choose funds held because it reduces collateral requirements, lowers financing costs, and aligns cash flow with long tail loss development.
Regardless of the type of reinsurance agreement you’re looking at, funds held can be a useful tool to help manage collateral requirements and cash flow needs.
What problem does funds held solve in reinsurance?
It reduces the need for collateral or frequent cash transfers by letting the cedant hold the reinsurer’s share of premium and settle only the net amount over time.
Why is funds held more common in quota share treaties?
Quota share treaties have predictable, continuous premium and loss activity. Funds held streamlines this by allowing the cedant to offsetlosses directly against the retained premium balance.
How does funds held affect financial statements?
The cedant records a funds held liability, while their insurer records a funds held asset. Investment income is credited to their insurer, and losses are deducted from the balance as they occur.
For further guidance, please contact us. Larson and Company has developed a suite of services specifically to serve the needs of insurance companies.