The Tech Brunch The Tech Brunch

The Tech Brunch

The Tech Brunch

  • Home
  • Startups
  • Social
  • Enterprise
  • Gadgets
  • Greentech
  • Mobile
  • Fundings and exits
The Tech BrunchThe Tech Brunch
  • Startups
  • Social
  • Enterprise
  • Gadgets
  • Greentech
  • Mobile
  • Fundings and exits
Home > > Coterie raises $8.5M to build ‘commercial insurance as a service’

Coterie raises $8.5M to build ‘commercial insurance as a service’

Published: Apr 03, 2022

Ohio-based Coterie, a startup working on in the commercial insurance space, has announced today it has raised $8.5 million Series A. The company had previously raised a little over $3 million in early investments, bringing its equity capital raised to nearly $12 million to date; the firm also told TechCrunch that it has raised $2.5 million in available venture debt as part of its current round.

In an uncertain market, Coterie is better capitalized than it ever has been, thanks to Intercept, and The Hartford, and Hippo, which led its latest round.

Coterie operates in insurtech, a space we’ve covered extensively in recent months. But it’s not MetroMile or Lemonade, both of which selling consumer insurance. Nor is it akin to The Zebra, Policy Genius, Gabi, or Insurify, helping consumers link to third-party insurance products. It’s closest private market comp, looking at our recent coverage, is Briza, which produces APIs linking small businesses to small business insurance products.

But what Coterie does is slightly different if we’re grokking its model correctly: It offers what it calls “commercial insurance as a service,” according to an interview with TechCrunch. Let’s explore.

Model

In a call with TechCrunch about its latest funding event, Coterie explained that, using APIs, it connects “places that have some commercial insurance requirement, or service customers who need commercial insurance, and we simply pass that information into our system and we quote and bind automatically.”

While Coterie does partner with external insurance entities (more on that in a second), it handles a lot of the work in-house: “We actually have the underwriting control, so we don’t we don’t ship it off to 10 different carriers. We actually say yes, we will bind this policy, or no, we won’t,” said Coterie CEO David McFarland, adding that “most of the time we have a pretty broad appetite so we can write a good bit of business.”

Helping it in this process are some partners in the insurance market that help with “the licenses and the capital requirements,” the company said.

What makes Coterie interesting isn’t that is a digital take on a previously paper business, but that it’s product allows it to insure freelancers (Coterie partners with freelance marketplaces, allowing it access to a potential customer base and helping the marketplace itself provide insured providers) for even small increments of time; that’s something that wasn’t economically attractive under old models, if even possible.

According to the firm, it offers general and professional liability insurance, along with business owners policies. Coterie has eyes on various types of data to power its model (and make good policy pricing choices), highlighting information like business payment flows to vet company health, to pick an example.

Coterie only started selling its products in September of 2019, but noted to TechCrunch that it saw “pretty good growth” from from the jump, and “pretty steady growth” since then. But as Coterie noted in our call, insurance is a somewhat low-margin business, meaning that policy growth, while good, needs to be pretty steep for the gross margin generated to stack up too high.

But with $8.5 million in new equity capital and total access to over $10 million in funds, the startup now has more money than ever to pursue its model. And if it’s like the rest of the insurtech space, it has a good shot at quick growth.

You Might Also Like

Best Mobile Phones for Social Media Creators in India (Budget and Top Picks)

Lenovo Android Tablet vs iPad for Students – Which One is Better for Indian Budget and Studies

Best Enterprise Collaboration Tools for Indian Companies

How to get funding for startup from government – full guide for Indian founders

Previous Article Rallyhood exposed a decade of users’ private data Rallyhood exposed a decade of users’ private data
Next Article Under quarantine, media is actually social Under quarantine, media is actually social

Latest News

Best Mobile Phones for Social Media Creators in India (Budget and Top Picks)
Mobile May 22, 2026
Lenovo Android Tablet vs iPad for Students Which One is Better for Indian Budget and Studies
Gadgets May 20, 2026
Best Enterprise Collaboration Tools for Indian Companies
Enterprise May 18, 2026
How to get funding for startup from government full guide for Indian founders
Startups May 15, 2026
Best Seed Funding for Startups in India 2026 | SISFS Guide
Fundings and exits May 13, 2026
How to Invest in Greentech Startups in India Simple Guide for Beginners
Greentech May 11, 2026
Latest Social Media News Today India | Top Trends 2026
Social May 08, 2026
Best Android Phone Under 20000 with 5G in India 2026 - Top 10 Picks
Mobile May 06, 2026
Lenovo Android Laptop vs HP for Programmers: Best Pick in India 2026
Gadgets May 04, 2026
Best Enterprise Data Analytics Tools for Manufacturing India
Enterprise May 01, 2026
about us

  • Startups
  • Social
  • Enterprise
  • Gadgets
  • Greentech
  • Mobile
  • Fundings and exits
Privacy on Social Media: How to Stay Safe Online in 2025
Privacy on Social Media: How to Stay Safe Online in 2025
Social Jul 04, 2025
Top 10 Electronic Gadgets Everyone is Talking About in 2025
Top 10 Electronic Gadgets Everyone is Talking About in 2025
Gadgets Jun 26, 2025

© Copyright 2026 thetechbrunch.com All Rights Reserved.

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms And Conditions