What Are Allocated Loss Adjustment Expenses (ALAE)?
Let me explain what allocated loss adjustment expenses, or ALAE, really are. These are the costs that get directly tied to handling a specific insurance claim. As an insurer, you have to set aside funds for ALAE in your expense reserves—it's one of the biggest items there, right alongside contingent commissions.
Understanding Allocated Loss Adjustment Expenses (ALAE)
When you look at ALAE together with unallocated loss adjustment expenses (ULAE), they give you an insurer's best guess at what it'll cost to pay out claims and handle the related expenses. Insurers reserve money for these to make sure claims aren't fraudulent and to process the real ones efficiently.
ALAE is all about the specifics of one claim. Think payments to outsiders for investigating, adjusting the loss, or providing legal advice. On the other hand, ULAE covers the broader stuff, like your overhead costs, general investigations, and employee salaries.
For example, if a life insurance company uses its own staff for field adjustments, that counts as ULAE, not ALAE.
Special Considerations
You need to know that some commercial liability policies come with endorsements. These can make the policyholder pay back the insurance company for loss adjustment expenses, whether ALAE or ULAE. Adjusting a loss means figuring out its value or negotiating a settlement.
So, these expenses are usually what the insurer spends to defend or settle a liability claim against you, the policyholder. That includes fees for attorneys, investigators, experts, arbitrators, mediators, and other costs related to adjusting the claim.
Pay close attention to the endorsement wording. It might state that loss adjustment expenses don't include your own attorney fees and costs if the insurer denies coverage and you successfully sue them. In that case, since the insurer didn't actually adjust the claim, they shouldn't apply their deductible to your defense costs for a claim they abandoned.
ALAE vs. Unallocated Loss Adjustment Expenses (ULAE)
Insurers are moving more expenses from ULAE to ALAE categories these days. That's because they're getting smarter about claims handling and have better tools to control costs.
Simple, small claims are the easiest to settle, and they don't rack up much ALAE compared to those that drag on for years. The big-loss potential claims get extra attention—deep investigations, settlement talks, maybe even court time. More scrutiny means more cost.
You can check how well an insurer estimates its reserves by looking at loss reserve development. That's when they tweak their estimates for loss and loss adjustment expense reserves over time.
What Are the Differences Between ALAE and ULAE?
To break it down directly: ALAE are the costs specifically for processing one particular insurance claim, and they're part of the insurer's expense reserves. ULAE, though, are the general expenses like overhead, investigations, and salaries.
What Should Policyholders Know About Endorsements?
Endorsements can require you, the policyholder, to reimburse the insurance company for loss adjustment expenses. Make sure you read the language carefully—it might exclude your attorney fees and costs if the insurer denies coverage and you win a lawsuit against them.
Other articles for you

Passive investing focuses on minimizing costs and replicating market indices for long-term returns, contrasting with active strategies that involve more research and higher fees.

This text explains what mutual funds are, how they work, their types, benefits, drawbacks, and how to invest in them.

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) are entities like hedge funds and pension funds that invest in foreign markets, providing capital to developing economies while facing regulations to ensure market stability.

A buy limit order allows you to purchase a security only at or below a specified price to avoid overpaying.

A dove in economics is a policy advisor favoring low interest rates to boost employment over controlling inflation.

The up/down gap side-by-side white lines is a three-candle continuation pattern on candlestick charts that signals the trend will likely persist.

The secondary market is where investors trade securities among themselves after initial issuance in the primary market, providing liquidity and price discovery.

This text explains the structure, operations, fees, benefits, and drawbacks of homeowners associations (HOAs) in managing community properties.

Green Monday is the second Monday in December, known for a surge in last-minute holiday purchases and online deals, originating from eBay in 2007.

Underlying mortality assumptions are projections of death rates used by actuaries to calculate insurance and pension costs based on statistical tables.