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MorningsideHealth & Risk

How do brokers get paid?

Three common compensation structures:

  • Commission: a percentage of the policy premium, paid by the carrier (not by you on top of the premium). Standard commercial rates run 5–15% of premium depending on line and carrier; most fall in the 2–8% range. Commission is built into the premium the carrier charges, not added separately.
  • Fee-based: the carrier writes the policy "net of commission" (no broker commission), and the client pays the broker a separate annual fee for services. Common on larger accounts (>$100K premium) where transparency matters more than the commission convention.
  • Hybrid: some commission + some service fee, with the fee often offsetting commission to the same total cost as a fully-commissioned arrangement.

NY DFS regulates broker compensation disclosure — clients have a right to ask how their broker is compensated on any specific placement, and we'll disclose openly. Beyond base commission, brokers may receive contingent commissions (paid by carriers for hitting volume, growth, or loss-ratio targets) or supplemental commissions (a fixed annual amount based on prior-year performance) — these are also disclosed on request.

Category
Billing & Claims
Audience
All audiences
Topic
General

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