Overview The European market for legal insurance is well-developed, with Germany, France and the Netherlands, representing respectively 43%, 14%, and 8% of the market. Legal protection insurance has become more common outside of Europe, including in Canada, Japan, South Africa and USA. It is also emerging in Australia, Chile, China, New Zealand and South Korea.
European Union and members According to a survey commissioned by RIAD and conducted by Ipsos in August 2017 in Germany, France, Ireland, and the Netherlands, over a quarter of respondents had had a legal dispute in the previous five years. The replies showed that in all four countries people are mainly concerned about the costs of a dispute, this is particularly true in Ireland (50% of respondents) where fees for lawyers are extremely high. In comparison to the other countries, Dutch citizens are particularly wary of wasting time and energy (33%) while Germans tend to be concerned about being deprived of their rights (27% compared to 18% in Ireland and only 10% and 8% in France and the Netherlands). This is further complicated by the freedom of
member states to regulate differently from the EU in some matters, for example necessitating insurance for individual farms which grow
genetically engineered crops and intend to sell them to other EU member states.
Germany Four out of ten Germans would be willing to take legal action if the average damage cost is around 600 €. Legal insurance in Germany covers the lawyer fees and court costs. Some policies even pay for the bail. There are four types of legal insurance in Germany: private, traffic, real estate, and work. The cost of legal insurance varies based on the type of legal insurance. Customers can even take one or multiple types of legal insurance. A policy providing comprehensive coverage in Germany costs between 185 € and 383 € per annum as of 2026. There are also several unions that offer legal support. For example, tenant associations and landlord associations offer legal advice to tenants and landlords respectively. These associations even help their members to settle the dispute out-of-court. However, associations offer no support when the case ends up in court. Legal insurance pays when the case goes into court. Lawyer's fees calculation are based on the Lawyers' Compensation Act (RVG). Per RVG, a lawyer's fee is calculated based on the amount or value in dispute.
Canada The Canadian market has been growing rapidly and several companies (some native, some US-based) offer legal protection insurance. In 2016 legal protection insurance gross written premium was around 56 million Canadian dollars; compared to the previous year almost double. In order to promote further access to justice, in 2013, the
Canadian Bar Association partnered with DAS Canada, a Canadian licensed specialist legal protection insurance company. In
Québec, legal protection insurance is both endorsed and promoted by Québec's
law society (
bar association),
Le Barreau du Québec.
Japan The Japanese market had a gross written premium of around 600 million euros in 2016, which makes of Japan the fifth biggest market after Germany, France, USA and the Netherlands. In 2016, legal protection cover added-on to motor insurance represented 90% of the market share; this is due to the fact that stand-alone insurance has only been introduced in the last decade.
Netherlands According to a survey commissioned in 2016 by the Dutch Ministry of Security and Justice, lawyers who provided services through legal protection insurers scored highest in regard of the perceived quality of services as well as on the basis of a peer review.
South Africa In South Africa, legal insurance is primarily sold directly to consumers without intermediaries. Legal insurers resolve approximately eighty percent of cases through in-house legal counselors.
United Kingdom In the United Kingdom, legal protection insurance is primarily marketed directly to the end user without an intermediary. The focus is on preventive dispute resolution via in-house lawyers. 80% of issues are resolved in-house. In its report of November 2017,
The Law and Practicalities of Before-The-Event (BTE) Insurance – An Information Study, the UK Civil Justice Council concludes that legal protection insurance offers many people access to significant legal assistance. To this end, LPI's legal helplines are filling a real gap in the marketplace and in this regard insurers considerably improve access to justice in the current landscape. The report also sees a general lack of awareness among consumers about the existence of a legal protection cover as such as well as about the scope of the coverage. The report underlines that all stakeholders (lawyers, brokers, insurers, the Law Society, and the advice sector) can actively contribute to improving the awareness of legal protection insurance. With this the report confirms prior findings of two previous reports (Thematic Review of the UK's Motor Legal Expenses Insurance industry by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) of 2013, Report of the UK
Ministry of Justice published in October 2007). The FCA saw that many consumers were not able to distinguish between the cover of motor insurance (protection against liability for third-party damages) and motor legal protection insurance (pursuit of claims to recover uninsured losses and protection against criminal prosecution). The 2007 report of the Ministry of Justice comes to the result that, although 59% of the UK population have some form of legal protection insurance (whether they knew it or not), fewer than one in four consumers had ever heard of BTE nor of ATE insurance. The Ministry's research estimated that 28 million British adults have actually BTE insurance, mostly as an add-on to another insurance policy. Staged premium policies are available with, for example, an initial premium paid at the initiation of the claim, a second premium paid when proceedings are issued and a further premium paid just before
trial, so long as each of these stages is reached. In May 2012, District Judge Smedley, sitting as a Regional Costs Judge, considered eight
test cases, the "Liverpool ATE Premium Test Cases", in which ATE insurance premiums had been taken out by the claimants, in order to look at
United States Pre-paid legal services are relatively new in the United States. There are a variety of
online legal services that offer legal plans which usually cover specific events like drafting a contract or a will, while legal protection insurance covers unforeseen events (e.g. employment or consumer disputes). Legal plans rely mainly on bulk savings (for instance mass purchasing of legal services or in-house counsel for a specified group of people, such as trade union members) rather than on insurance principles, i.e. they do not include guarantees like insurance but provide cover only until the accumulated funds are used up. Legal plans are offered by trade unions as a free benefit of union membership or they are set up by groups of people having a common interest, like university students. == See also ==