Vitalis Group SA — South African Insurance Industry Analysis
The South African insurance industry — market size and gross written premium, insurance penetration, growth, structural trends and the regulatory backdrop.
Section 3 · Business Plan
South African Insurance Industry Analysis
The South African insurance industry — market size and gross written premium, insurance penetration, growth, structural trends and the regulatory backdrop.
3.1 Industry Structure and Scale
The South African insurance industry is the largest and most
developed on the African continent. According to the Prudential
Authority’s 2024 Annual Report and the latest Swiss Re Sigma study,
gross written premium reached approximately ZAR 581 billion in 2024,
equivalent to 13.7% of GDP — a level comparable to mature economies such
as the United Kingdom and the United States, and materially ahead of
regional peers.
The industry comprises three principal segments — long-term (life)
insurance, short-term (non-life) insurance, and medical schemes — each
of which is regulated by a distinct framework but increasingly
converging at the customer level. Within each segment, market structure
is meaningfully concentrated: the top five players control more than 70%
of premium in long-term insurance and more than 60% in short-term
insurance.
Gross written premium has grown at a compound annual growth rate
(CAGR) of 5.4% over the 2019–2024 period, somewhat constrained by
depressed economic growth and load-shedding. We forecast a recovery to a
CAGR of 6.4% over the 2024–2029 forecast horizon, supported by
middle-class growth, embedded insurance penetration and product
innovation. By 2029, the industry is expected to exceed ZAR 800 billion
in gross written premium.
3.2 Industry Segments — Detail
3.2.1 Long-Term (Life) Insurance
Long-term insurance is regulated under the Long-term Insurance Act
(succeeded by the Insurance Act 2017) and supervised by the Prudential
Authority. The sector wrote approximately ZAR 410 billion in gross
premium in 2024, dominated by Old Mutual, Sanlam, Discovery Life,
Momentum Metropolitan Holdings and Liberty. Profitability has been
steady on an Embedded Value (EV) basis, though Value of New Business
(VNB) margins have compressed from 4.2% in 2018 to roughly 3.1% in 2024
as competition and lapse rates have intensified.
3.2.2 Short-Term (Non-Life) Insurance
Short-term insurance is dominated by motor and property risk, with
smaller pools of accident & health, marine, aviation, and commercial
lines. Gross premium reached approximately ZAR 145 billion in 2024.
Santam holds the leading market share, followed by Hollard, OUTsurance,
and Discovery Insure. Combined ratios have deteriorated from a 5-year
average of 92% to recent levels of 99–101%, driven by
load-shedding-related power-surge claims, severe weather events and
motor claim inflation.
3.2.3 Medical Schemes and Health Insurance
Medical schemes are regulated under a parallel framework (the Medical
Schemes Act, 1998) by the Council for Medical Schemes. The sector covers
approximately 9.7 million principal members and dependants — about 16%
of the population — and collected ZAR 240 billion in contributions in
2024. Discovery Health Medical Scheme is the largest by some margin (38%
market share), followed by GEMS, Bonitas and Momentum Health Solutions.
Demarcation regulations enacted in 2017 created a regulated space for
primary-care insurance products, opening the door to lower-cost gap and
primary health solutions.
3.3 Penetration: A Bifurcated Picture
The headline penetration figure conceals a deeply bifurcated market.
Insurance density (premium per capita) is high relative to global
emerging-market peers, but the bulk of premiums concentrate in the upper
LSM segments. A FinScope Consumer Survey conducted in 2024 found that
47% of working-age South African adults have no formal life or
short-term insurance product, and an additional 18% are under-insured
relative to their economic exposures.
3.4 Industry Profitability and Capital
Industry return on equity has been gradually compressing. For listed
composite insurers, return on embedded value averaged 12.4% in 2024
versus a 5-year average of 14.2%. Three structural forces explain this
compression:
- Cost-to-income elevation. Legacy systems consume
18–22% of opex at the largest insurers; recent investments in
modernisation have yet to drive efficiencies through to the bottom
line. - Loss ratio inflation. Motor and property loss
ratios have risen due to vehicle theft, load-shedding-induced surge
claims, and severe weather (notably the April 2022 KwaZulu-Natal floods,
which produced more than ZAR 17 billion in insured losses). - Capital intensity under SAM. The Solvency
Assessment and Management (SAM) framework — South Africa’s adaptation of
Solvency II — has materially increased capital requirements for certain
risk pools.
3.5 Industry-Wide PESTLE Analysis
| Factor | Impact on the Industry |
|---|---|
| Political | Continued policy uncertainty around National Health Insurance (NHI). Two-pot retirement reform (implemented September 2024) is reshaping life and savings product economics. Regulatory engagement remains broadly constructive. |
| Economic | GDP growth has averaged ~1.0% over 2019–2024; inflation has moderated to within the SARB target band. Reduced load-shedding from 2024 onwards provides a tailwind. Unemployment at 32.9% remains the principal structural constraint. |
| Social | Rising middle-class population (~21M LSM 5–7); urbanisation; growing chronic disease burden (diabetes, hypertension); rapid mobile and digital adoption (smartphone penetration ~87%). |
| Technological | Cloud, AI underwriting, wearable devices, telematics, embedded insurance APIs and open-finance protocols all offer step-change cost and customer-experience improvements. Cyber risk is escalating. |
| Legal | Insurance Act 2017 stable; Conduct of Financial Institutions Bill (COFI) progressing through Parliament. POPIA fully in force. New conduct standards around treating customers fairly (TCF) and product oversight. |
| Environmental | Climate-related severe weather (floods, drought, hail) increasing claims frequency. ESG and net-zero commitments shaping investment and underwriting policy. TCFD-aligned disclosure expected of regulated entities. |
3.6 Porter’s Five Forces Assessment
The South African insurance industry’s structural attractiveness,
assessed against the classic five-forces framework, is moderate-to-good
for a well-positioned entrant. The summary scoring below reflects
management’s assessment, validated against independent industry analyst
commentary.
| Force | Intensity | Commentary |
|---|---|---|
| Threat of New Entrants | Medium | Regulatory and capital barriers are high. However, technology-enabled entrants can build cost-advantaged platforms; embedded distribution channels lower the customer-acquisition barrier. |
| Bargaining Power of Customers | Medium-High | Aggregator websites (Hippo, CompareGuru, Outsurance comparison) have increased price transparency; loyalty is weak in motor and home; stronger in life and medical due to underwriting friction. |
| Bargaining Power of Suppliers | Medium | Reinsurers (Munich Re, Swiss Re, SCOR, Hannover Re) hold meaningful pricing power on certain catastrophe lines; technology vendors increasingly commoditised. |
| Threat of Substitutes | Medium | Self-insurance, stokvels, funeral parlours and informal arrangements substitute for formal cover at the lower end. New “buy now pay later” credit products substitute for credit life. |
| Competitive Rivalry | High | Top five players in each segment are well capitalised and brand-led; price competition is intense in motor; product differentiation is achievable in health and integrated propositions. |
3.7 Industry Outlook
The medium-term outlook is constructive but uneven. Key themes:
- Digital natives gain share. Players with
cloud-native platforms and direct digital channels (notably OUTsurance,
Discovery, Naked, Pineapple) will continue to gain share at the expense
of legacy carriers. - Embedded insurance scales. Distribution through
retailers, mobile network operators and fintechs is expected to add ZAR
35–50 billion in incremental premium by 2030. - Shared-value spreads. The success of Discovery’s
Vitality has prompted multiple competitors (and global reinsurers) to
develop behaviour-led products; the model is becoming an industry
standard rather than a single-firm anomaly. - Consolidation accelerates. Sub-scale players
will increasingly be acquired or wound up. Two material transactions in
the past 24 months reinforce this trajectory. - Climate and ESG integration. Insurance pricing
and reserving will increasingly internalise climate risk; ESG-aligned
investment portfolios will become standard.
Confidential — this business plan is provided to prospective investors and lenders for evaluation purposes only and may not be reproduced or distributed without the written consent of Vitalis Group South Africa (Pty) Ltd.