Individual insurance policies are as unique and nuanced as individual policyholders; no two risk profiles are precisely the same, even if that which is being covered is under the same class or territory. Especially in a hard market with heightened premium pressures, both underwriters and agents require refined tools to differentiate risks. One such tool is Individual Risk Premium Modification (IRPM).
While class rating gives a starting point, IRPM allows for adjustments that reflect a property’s unique features, exposures, and loss-control profile. In effect, it bridges the gap between broad actuarial assumptions and the real, on-site realities of each risk.
WSRB doesn’t directly generate IRPMs, but its data, inspection reports, and analytical tools play a pivotal role in helping underwriters justify, document, and apply IRPMs effectively.
In this article, we’ll dive deep into:
At its core, Individual Risk Premium Modification (IRPM) is an adjustment (positive or negative) applied to the base premium (derived via class rating, territory, exposure, and other standard factors) to more accurately align premium to the individual risk’s true quality.
In Washington state, IRPMs can fall into the following categories for Part 1, Physical and Moral Conditions, on the IRPM worksheet:
The need for IRPM arises from the inherent limitations in class rating:
In a hard market, IRPMs are especially valuable. When insurers are pressured to tighten margins, they lean more heavily on refined risk differentiation instead of across-the-board rate hikes; IRPMs can help underwriters make precise pricing decisions.
For insurers / underwriters
For agents / brokers
For insureds / policyholders
For regulators / oversight
When underwriters evaluate IRPM, they dig deeper into attributes not fully captured in class or form rates. Below are principal categories and what underwriters look for in each.
How well the property is managed (housekeeping, maintenance schedules, inspection records). This includes whether the property owner/manager opts for preventive maintenance vs. reactive repairs.
Frequency, severity, and patterns of past losses, including whether causes of past losses have been addressed or mitigated.
Presence of flammable or hazardous materials, including operational exposures (e.g. welding, heat, chemicals). Also factors in mitigating features, such as firewalls, separation, containment, signage, and applicable training.
Sprinkler systems, alarm systems, fire pumps, emergency power, standby generators, redundant utilities, backup systems staff training, drills, fire brigade, and evacuation plans.
Note: If those features are already reflected in base rating or WSRB credit, you must avoid double counting. For example, if a sprinkler is already granted credit in the advisory loss cost, IRPM is not applicable.
Construction age, materials, design anomalies (e.g. sloped roofs, cantilevers) condition, deferred maintenance, and deterioration.
Includes exposure context, such as adjacent risks (proximity) and exterior exposures.
Training, supervision, safety culture, turnover, staff protocols, housekeeping, and hazardous operations controls.
Accessibility, traffic, and surrounding hazards, including:
Underwriters must weigh all these factors against internal guidelines and data. Good documentation, inspection reports, and third-party data play a critical role in defensibility.
WSRB does not produce IRPMs; rather, our data, inspection services, and reporting infrastructure supply essential inputs that empower insurers to apply IRPMs with confidence.
Here’s how WSRB supports the IRPM process:
WSRB’s mission includes producing advisory loss costs, derived from credible statistics. These serve as the base layer on which IRPM adjustments are made.
WSRB maintains and publishes protection class (PC) ratings for communities. Insurers can verify the base PC and see how community-level fire protection is credited.
Note: IRPM should not replicate or double count what the PC credit already encompasses.
Learn more about protection classes.
WSRB’s commercial property reports provide:
This data allows underwriters to see the real property context, which helps in IRPM decision-making.
If WSRB hasn’t recently inspected a building, underwriters or agents can request an inspection. While the inspection is primarily for establishing advisory loss cost, the resulting data becomes available to help justify IRPMs.
Learn more about commercial property inspections.
WSRB also offers the BuildingMetrix Suite, a collection of modern property intelligence tools that go beyond inspections and reports. These tools give underwriters insight into a building’s proximity to risks. By combining property-level details with surrounding exposure data, BuildingMetrix helps insurers see the full context of risk, making IRPM adjustments more defensible and accurate.
Below are several of the BuildingMetrix tools / datasets that are especially relevant to underwriting and IRPM:
| Tool / Dataset | What It Does | Why It Matters for IRPM / Underwriting |
|---|---|---|
| SlopeScout | Provides slope / terrain analysis for a property, showing elevation gradients, terrain features, and how buildings are situated relative to slopes. | Steep slopes or irregular terrain can increase exposure to landslides, drainage issues, wildfire spread, or structural stress. Knowing slope helps refine IRPM adjustment for environmental / site risk. |
| QuakeScout | Delivers earthquake-related metrics such as Modified Mercalli Intensity (MMI), soil liquefaction potential, fault proximity, seismic hazard overlays, etc. | Helps quantify seismic risk, which is often underweighted in typical rating. Underwriters can adjust for increased fire risk, structural damage potential, or additive risk. |
| CannabisFind | Identifies whether legal cannabis operations are located near or at insured properties. | Cannabis operations may bring increased fire, theft, or security risk. IRPM may need to debit risk when these exposures are present. |
| HempGuard | Detects hemp grower or processor operations in or near insured properties. | Similar exposures to cannabis — chemical, ventilation, fire, theft — that may influence premium loading. |
| DayCareSpotter | Identifies residential daycare facilities operating at or near a property. | The presence of daycare introduces additional liability, occupancy risk, and regulatory exposure that might justify IRPM loading. |
| AdultFamilyHomeSpotter | Locates licensed adult care / home care facilities close to or at properties. | Such use is often higher risk (e.g. occupants with mobility issues, medical equipment) and may warrant IRPM adjustment. |
| FirearmDealerFind | Reveals whether there is a federally licensed firearms dealer operating near or at a property. | Proximity to or presence of such businesses may raise liability, security, or theft risk. Adds to underwriter’s view of exposure. |
| TankHound | Surfaces properties with underground storage tank (UST) risk or environmental contamination potential. | USTs are major environmental risks. If present or near, they may merit debits or even non-acceptance, depending on severity. |
| BrickHound | Identifies buildings constructed with unreinforced masonry (URM) in seismic zones. | URM buildings are more vulnerable to damage during earthquakes (and secondary fire), so they may need upward IRPM adjustments. |
| HistoricHound | Flags historic or historically significant buildings. | Historic structures often come with increased maintenance, unique materials, retrofit limitations, and higher claim costs — all factors that influence IRPM. |
In sum: WSRB is the backbone of objective risk data. Insurers apply their own judgment and guidelines upstream of those data to set IRPMs.
As helpful as IRPM is, it’s not a magic button. Underwriters, agents, and insureds must understand its boundaries to avoid misuse or misunderstanding.
A well-designed IRPM program includes controls, audit trails, consistency checks, and alignment with filed rate practices
IRPM is where underwriting judgment meets data, a bridge between broad class ratings and the realities of individual risks; it offers insurers precision, agents advocacy, and policyholders fairness.
Looking ahead, evolving challenges like climate risk, novel construction materials and methods, and emerging forms of energy storage (read more about the risks of batteries) demand refined approaches.
WSRB will continue to play a key role by providing the objective foundation — advisory loss costs, protection class, inspections — while the BuildingMetrix Suite aims to expand the view beyond the property itself, surfacing proximity exposures, environmental hazards, and structural vulnerabilities that sharpen IRPM decisions.
Ultimately, IRPM isn’t just about pricing today’s risks — it’s a strategic lever for building stronger, more resilient portfolios tomorrow.