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The toll of 2025’s extreme weather events across Europe—and steps insurers can take now to reduce the financial risks posed by climate change

Contents: Executive summary Interactive map Actionable steps Resources Contact


Executive summary

From prolonged drought to intense rain: How did extreme weather affect Europe in 2025?

The year 2025 ranked among the three warmest years ever recorded. Extreme weather events—defined as severe natural catastrophes at extreme ends of historical trends—caused an estimated €43 billion in economic losses across Europe throughout the year.

While 2024 was “The Year of the Flood,” during 2025 European countries experienced a range of perils:

  • Heatwaves and drought affected large areas of the continent, particularly the south. But even Belgium and Germany endured above-average temperatures, and the UK recorded its hottest summer ever.
  • Extensive wildfires destroyed nearly 700,000 hectares across Portugal and Spain, while France and the Netherlands reported more wildfires than normal.
  • Rising subsidence claims—leading to cracks in walls, uneven floors and misaligned doors and windows—were seen in France, the UK and the Netherlands.
  • Storms and flash floods caused intense rainfall and river overflow affecting communities and infrastructure in parts of eastern and western Europe, including Poland, Austria, Spain and France.
  • Agricultural and infrastructure impacts were widespread and included power outages, crop damage and heat-driven declines in labor productivity, which will likely cause a rise in food prices.

Milliman’s 5th annual “Extreme weather in Europe” report assessed the impact of these and other events on insurers, communities and other stakeholders.

See the interactive map below for a glimpse at how extreme weather affected the 13 countries in our study. And scroll down to learn how insurers can adapt, and how the Milliman Climate Resilience Initiative is helping to address the crisis.

Download the full report
INTERACTIVE MAP

Extreme weather and insurance: The impact across Europe

Explore below to see a snapshot of 2025 extreme weather events in the highlighted countries.

Austria

Thunderstorms cause €9 million in agricultural losses
Austria country shape

Belgium

Record-low 20 days of spring rain, followed by hot, dry summer
Austria country shape

France

Summer heat and drought, then autumn floods cause €420 million in damages

Germany

€2.6 billion in insured losses from storms, hail, lightning, heavy rains and floods

Ireland

January’s “once-in-a-generation” windstorm causes €300 million in insured losses

Italy

€6.8 billion in damages from drought, €4.5 billion from flooding, €494 million from heat

Luxembourg

Rain on one September day causes €8 million in damages

Netherlands

Long-term drought sparks wildfires, lower groundwater levels, subsidence claims

Poland

Drought and intense rain contribute to nat-cat losses around €200 million

Portugal

200 summer wildfires burn nearly 300,000 hectares

Romania

Below-average rainfall, above-average heat

Spain

Massive summer wildfires followed by autumn floods

UK

Hottest spring and summer on record


Actionable steps

How insurers can help manage the risks posed by climate change

As extreme weather continues to become more frequent across Europe, insurers must adapt, both through internal innovations and by collaborating with governments and policyholders. Many insurers are seeking the help of actuaries and other experts who have knowledge of product design, risk modelling and local European markets.

Key strategies to boost resilience include the following:

Advanced and dynamic risk modelling

Upgraded catastrophe models will be vital to capture the increasing severity and frequency of extreme weather events driven by climate change.


Insurance product innovation

New insurance solutions that can respond to heat, drought and flood-related risks include parametric products, public–private risk-sharing mechanisms and coverage structures that maintain affordability while reducing protection gaps.


Investments in climate mitigation and adaptation

Instead of determining after a disaster how to fund the recovery—when repairs are more expensive—stakeholders must make proactive investments to shore up infrastructure, agriculture and other key sectors.


Cooperation between insurers and government

By strengthening collaboration with national and EU-level authorities, insurers can help support resilient infrastructure investment, climate adaptation strategies and more sustainable insurance frameworks.


Education, transparency and public awareness

Insurers can benefit from expanding communication about climate risks, insurance limitations and adaptation responsibilities to help manage expectations and build policyholder trust in a changing risk landscape.

See more analysis and actionable steps for insurers

Download the full report

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Resource

Milliman Climate Resilience Initiative

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Niccolò Basetti Sani Vettori

Ada Bowler

Ankush Hingorani

Houssayn Meriche

Ian Penfold

Victoria Pointner

Francesco Pugassi

Menno van Wijk

Amsterdam Insurance and Financial Risk | Tel: 31686819827

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