
Cyber Insurance 2.0: Why Your 2026 Policy Now Requires “Proof of Defense”
The End of the “Honest Questionnaire”
In the past, you could secure cyber insurance by checking “Yes” on a box that asked if you had a firewall. In May 2026, that era is over. Insurers are now using External Attack Surface Management (EASM) tools to scan your network before they even send you a quote. If they see open ports or unpatched vulnerabilities, your application is rejected before it reaches a human desk.
The “Big Three” Mandatory Controls for 2026
To qualify for a Cyber 2.0 policy today, these three technologies are non-negotiable:
- EDR (Endpoint Detection & Response): Traditional antivirus is officially dead in the eyes of insurers. Carriers now require EDR tools (like CrowdStrike or Microsoft Defender for Endpoint) that provide 24/7 monitoring and automated “threat isolation” capabilities.
- Enforced MFA (Multi-Factor Authentication): It’s no longer enough to “have” MFA. Insurers now verify if it is enforced 100% across email, remote access, and—critically—all administrative accounts. Phishing-resistant MFA (like FIDO2 security keys) is the gold standard for 2026.
- Immutable “Air-Gapped” Backups: Because 2026 ransomware often targets the backup files first, insurers require “Immutability.” This means your data is stored in a format that cannot be deleted or encrypted for a set period, even if an admin account is compromised.
The “Tabletop” Requirement: Proving You Can React
In 2026, a “paper” Incident Response (IR) plan is considered useless. Underwriters now ask for evidence of a Tabletop Exercise conducted within the last 12 months. They want to see:
- A documented list of who is on the “Breach Team.”
- Proof that you have tested your restoration time (RTO).
- Evidence that you have a legal firm and a forensic team on “Retainer” or pre-approved by the policy.
The AI Exclusion Clause
A new trend in May 2026 is the “Shadow AI” Exclusion. If your employees use unauthorized AI tools (like non-enterprise versions of ChatGPT or Claude) and sensitive data is leaked, your insurer may deny the claim under “Gross Negligence” if you don’t have a formal AI Usage Policy in place.
