What Is a Policy Lapse in Insurance?
A policy lapse is when a policy stops being active — usually because the customer didn't pay. Lapses are invisible revenue killers. They don't show up on new-business scoreboards, but they destroy the compounding value of your book.
In this guide:
- The short definition
- The 3 most common causes
- How lapses differ from cancellations
- How to reduce your lapse rate
What is a policy lapse?
When a policy ends because the customer didn't pay their premium or didn't take action to keep it active.
Different from a cancellation (customer actively decides to leave). A lapse is passive — the policy expired because the customer didn't do anything.
Example. A customer's auto policy is set to renew June 1. They don't pay the renewal premium. The policy lapses June 15 after the grace period. They're no longer insured.
The 3 most common causes
Cause 1 — Rate shock
Customer's renewal premium jumps 20%+ with no warning. They don't pay because they're shopping (and they may not come back).
Cause 2 — Payment failure
Credit card expired. Auto-pay was cancelled when they switched banks. They meant to pay but forgot. Pure friction.
Cause 3 — Carrier action
Carrier didn't renew (non-pay lapse from the carrier side, not the customer). Usually means the policy was flagged high-risk or the product was discontinued.
Lapse vs. cancellation
| Type | What happened |
|---|---|
| Lapse | Passive — customer didn't pay or didn't take action |
| Cancellation | Active — customer called and asked to end |
| Non-renewal | Carrier chose not to offer a renewal |
| Chargeback | Commission comes back because policy ended early |
Each has a different fix. Lapses are usually the most preventable because they often come from friction, not intent.
How to reduce lapse rate
Three interventions, highest impact first:
Intervention 1 — Proactive rate-change calls
When a customer's renewal is about to go up significantly, call them before they see the bill. Offer options. Keep control of the conversation.
Agencies that proactively call rate-shock renewals retain 20–30 points higher on those policies.
Intervention 2 — Auto-pay on every policy
Customers on auto-pay lapse at roughly half the rate of customers on manual-pay. Push every new customer to auto-pay at the point of sale.
Intervention 3 — Payment failure recovery
When a payment fails, call within 48 hours. Don't wait for the grace period to expire. Most payment-failure lapses are recoverable with one phone call.
Lapse rate benchmarks
Typical annual lapse rates by product:
| Product | Healthy lapse rate |
|---|---|
| Personal auto | 8–12% |
| Homeowners | 4–8% |
| Life | 3–8% |
| Health | 10–20% |
Lapse rate is 100% minus retention rate (approximately). An 88% retention book has roughly a 12% combined lapse + cancellation rate.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I track lapses in AgencyIQ?
The Policy Activity page captures all policy activity from carrier reports — including lapses, cancellations, and non-renewals. You can filter by reason type and producer.
What's the difference between a company cancel and a customer cancel?
Company cancel = carrier cancelled (non-payment, underwriting issue). Customer cancel = customer called to end the policy. Both count toward lapse rate but have different root causes.
Can a lapsed policy come back?
Often yes — reinstatement. Customer pays outstanding premium (usually with a fee) and the policy resumes. Reinstated policies often retain well because the customer just proved they want the coverage.
Which producers have the worst lapse rates?
AgencyIQ's producer scorecard shows lapse rate by producer. Usually correlates with lead source — producers working shared or aged leads see higher lapse rates because those customers are less committed at bind.
Stop losing customers to avoidable lapses
AgencyIQ is free during beta for Founding Members. Track every lapse, cancellation, and reinstatement — by producer and by carrier.
Last updated: 2026-04-18