Cyber Insurance EDR Requirements 2026: Underwriter Checklist
What cyber insurance underwriters actually verify on EDR in 2026 — endpoint coverage, active response, 24/7 monitoring, and the gaps that get claims denied.
The pattern that drives the largest single category of denied cyber insurance claims in 2026 looks identical to the MFA denial pattern we covered last week: the EDR was deployed on the application, but not deployed across the actual environment. The endpoint that got compromised had no agent. Or it had an agent that hadn’t checked in for three weeks. Or it had an agent that was in alert-only mode with nobody watching the alerts after 6 p.m. Or it was a server that didn’t get the workstation EDR because nobody remembered server licensing was a separate SKU.
In every case, the claim binder says “we have EDR on every endpoint.” The forensic evidence says otherwise. The carrier denies under the policy’s representations clause and the operator absorbs a six- or seven-figure incident cost they thought they had insured against.
This post is the deeper read on what cyber insurance carriers actually require for endpoint detection and response in 2026 — which factors satisfy them, which gaps get claims denied, and what evidence you need at renewal. Companion to the parent 2026 cyber insurance requirements guide, the MFA requirements deep dive, and the renewal checklist.
Key Takeaways
- EDR is now table stakes, not a discount. Carriers refuse to bind coverage above modest limits without verifiable EDR deployment. Antivirus alone — including the free Microsoft Defender Antivirus that ships with Windows — does not satisfy the 2026 EDR question.
- “EDR on every endpoint” means servers, hypervisors, domain controllers, RDS hosts, BYOD, and contractor laptops — not just workforce workstations. Server-class licensing is a separate SKU at most vendors.
- Active response is the qualifier that separates passing EDR from failing EDR. An agent that logs and emails alerts doesn’t satisfy modern carrier requirements; the agent has to be capable of isolation, process termination, and automated remediation, with humans watching.
- MDR is the easiest way to satisfy 24/7 coverage for any organization without a 24/7-staffed IT team. Carriers increasingly require documented response SLAs (15-minute MTTA, 60-minute MTTC are typical baselines).
- The evidence binder is the deal-maker. Coverage report + agent health report + response runbook + MDR SLA + exception register. Walk in with this and renewals stay flat or improve. Wing it and absorb the carrier’s worst-case pricing assumption.
From Antivirus to Active Response: Why EDR Became Table Stakes
Cyber insurance underwriting in 2018 asked one endpoint question: do you have antivirus. Most operators answered yes. Most carriers accepted the answer.
By 2022 that question had migrated to “do you have next-generation endpoint protection,” and the meaning had shifted from signature-based detection to behavioral analytics. The signal carriers were tracking was ransomware claim frequency — and the data was clear: organizations with legacy AV were paying claims at multiples of organizations with modern EDR.
By 2025 the question was binary: EDR or no EDR. Brokers publicly cited missing EDR as a standalone reason for refusal in a tightening market. Premium increases of 40–100% for organizations without EDR were routine, when coverage was offered at all.
The 2026 reality is that EDR with 24/7 monitoring on every endpoint and every server has become a baseline — not a control that earns a discount, but a control whose absence triggers either refusal or surplus-lines pricing (typically triple standard rates). Three of four carriers now run external attack-surface scans during underwriting to verify the operator’s attestations. The era of questionnaire-based underwriting is over.
”EDR on Every Endpoint” — What Carriers Actually Mean in 2026
The application question is short. The carrier’s intended scope is broad. The 2026 scope every operator should treat as in-bounds:
- Workstations and laptops (every employee, every contractor on a company device, every device with persistent business-data access)
- Windows Servers — all of them, including dormant or rarely-touched systems
- Linux Servers — CrowdStrike, SentinelOne, Microsoft Defender for Endpoint, and Sophos now all support Linux; “we only run Windows EDR” is no longer a defensible answer for a mixed environment
- Hypervisors — the VMware ESXi or Hyper-V host itself, separate from the guest VMs (ESXi ransomware is now the dominant 2025–2026 enterprise attack pattern)
- Domain controllers — the most frequently-cited EDR gap; EDR vendors handle the AD-replication noise, deploy them anyway
- File servers and database servers — the highest-value targets for double-extortion ransomware
- RDS / VDI hosts — each session host plus the broker; one infected session can pivot to all
- Internet-facing application servers — DMZ web apps especially
- Mobile devices with business-data access — modern EDR vendors offer iOS / Android agents (Defender for Endpoint, CrowdStrike Falcon for Mobile, SentinelOne Mobile)
- BYOD and contractor devices that touch business data (see FAQ for the three approaches that satisfy carriers)
Plus the non-obvious endpoints that catch operators off guard:
- Air-gapped or “isolated” systems — every air-gapped system that nonetheless has USB or removable-media access. Document the compensating control if the EDR truly can’t run.
- OT and IIoT devices in construction, manufacturing, and healthcare environments — increasingly in scope as cyber-physical risk surfaces
- Decommissioned-but-still-online systems — the test environment that was supposed to be retired in 2024 and is still reachable from the production network
The carrier’s question is not “do most endpoints have EDR.” It’s “can you produce a coverage report that shows 100% of in-scope devices have a healthy, recently-checked-in EDR agent, with documented exceptions and compensating controls for every exception?”
Active Response: The Qualifier That Separates Acceptable EDR from Rejected EDR
EDR with logging and alerting is not modern EDR. The 2026 carrier expectation is active response — the agent’s capability (and the operator’s configuration) to automatically contain a detected threat without waiting for human approval. The minimum behaviors carriers verify:
- Endpoint isolation — the agent can cut a compromised device’s network connectivity (except to the EDR console) within seconds of confirmed detection
- Process termination — the agent can kill malicious processes mid-execution
- File quarantine — the agent can isolate and remediate malicious files automatically
- Indicator blocking — known-bad domains, IPs, and hashes are blocked across the fleet without manual rule push
- Automated remediation — common attack patterns trigger pre-configured remediation playbooks
The opposite — what carriers reject as inadequate — is an EDR in pure alerting mode: the agent detects, sends an email, and waits for a human to respond. Below business hours, that human is asleep. By the time they’re back at the keyboard, the attacker has lateral-moved through the environment. Carriers have learned this pattern from claims data and now ask the active-response question explicitly.
MDR vs EDR vs MSSP — Which Satisfies Carriers in 2026
The terminology confuses operators more than the underlying question does. Carrier-facing definitions:
- EDR (tool) — the agent + console (CrowdStrike Falcon, SentinelOne Singularity, Microsoft Defender for Endpoint, Sophos Intercept X, Cisco Secure Endpoint, Huntress, Sentry’s, etc.)
- MDR (service) — humans watching the EDR around the clock, with documented response SLAs, triage capability, and remediation authority
- MSSP (broader) — managed security services provider; may include MDR plus SIEM, vulnerability management, log review, compliance reporting
What carriers verify in 2026:
- EDR tool alone — accepted only with documented self-managed 24/7 capability (organizations with internal SOCs)
- EDR + MDR (managed) — the predominant 2026 model for mid-market; carriers prefer named SLAs, SOC 2 Type II certification of the MDR partner, and recent IR evidence
- EDR + MSSP — equivalent for carrier purposes if MDR is part of the bundle; the MSSP relationship’s broader scope is bonus, not required
MDR is not necessarily expensive. Per-endpoint MDR pricing in 2026 typically ranges $4–$12/month for mid-market deployments. Compared to the actuarial expectation of a $400K–$1.5M ransomware incident — and the higher premium carriers attach to self-managed EDR — MDR is the dominant cost-effective answer for any organization without a 24/7-staffed security operation.
24/7 Coverage: The After-Hours Question Carriers Ask
Carriers track the time-of-day distribution of attacks against their book. The data is consistent: a meaningful fraction of ransomware incidents land on weekends and overnight, exactly because attackers know IT teams aren’t watching. “We monitor during business hours” was an acceptable answer in 2019. In 2026 it is the answer that gets coverage denied or priced punitively.
The 24/7 coverage standard carriers verify:
- Mean Time to Acknowledge (MTTA) — typically 15 minutes for a critical alert at any hour
- Mean Time to Contain (MTTC) — typically 60 minutes for a critical alert at any hour
- After-hours staffing — named on-call rotation or a partner with named SOC analysts
- Escalation path — the documented chain from initial alert through containment to operator notification
The single most common failure mode carriers find at audit: a documented runbook that nobody on the team has read, and an on-call phone number that goes to voicemail. The fix is operational, not technological: practice the runbook quarterly, rotate on-call deliberately, and engage an MDR partner if internal coverage can’t realistically achieve the SLAs.
The 6 Deployment Gaps That Get Claims Denied
The patterns that show up repeatedly in denied-claim forensic reports:
- Missing-server EDR. The workstation deployment got rolled out; the server deployment got delayed and forgotten. The encrypted file server had no agent.
- BYOD with no agent. A contractor’s personal laptop had domain credentials cached. Carrier audit found the device, found no EDR, denied the claim.
- Decommissioned-account exception. A former employee’s account was disabled, but their laptop was reissued and the new user’s enrollment never completed. EDR agent stopped reporting; nobody noticed.
- Dormant-device drift. A legacy system that someone “would get to next month” went unmonitored for years. Attacker found it via internal scan, pivoted from there.
- Unhealthy-agent gap. Agents were deployed but a meaningful percentage were out of date, in degraded mode, or not checking in. Coverage report showed 100%; actual telemetry showed 73%.
- Partial-fleet attestation. Operator certified EDR on “all endpoints” meaning all workforce workstations. Servers, hypervisors, domain controllers, and RDS hosts were not in the operator’s mental model of “endpoint.”
Each of these is preventable with the evidence-binder discipline below — and each is exactly what carriers look for in the post-incident forensic.
How to Document EDR Compliance for Renewal
The renewal binder needs five specific pieces of evidence for the EDR question:
- Coverage report. From the EDR console: every device, its agent version, its last check-in time, its health status, its license tier (workstation or server class). The bar is 100% of in-scope devices with healthy, recently-checked-in agents and a documented exception register for the rest.
- Agent health report. A separate view (or a delta report) showing how unhealthy agents are detected and remediated — including the SLA for resolving an unhealthy-agent ticket. Carriers want evidence of the operational discipline, not just the headline number.
- Response runbook. The documented procedure that fires when an alert lands — who gets paged, in what order, with what authority. Bonus: the most recent dated revision and the most recent tabletop date.
- MDR SLA contract or internal coverage attestation. If using MDR: the partner contract showing response SLAs and the partner’s SOC 2 Type II certification. If self-managed: the named on-call rotation and a recent incident response (real or simulated) showing the runbook executed.
- Exception register. The list of every device where EDR cannot run, with the documented reason and the compensating control. Air-gapped systems, legacy appliances, vendor-managed devices — each one named, each one with its alternative control.
Operators who walk into renewal with this binder routinely keep premiums flat or improve them by 15–30%. Operators who wing it absorb the carrier’s worst-case pricing assumption.
Tools That Pass the Audit
The EDR vendors that satisfy 2026 carrier requirements with appropriate configuration:
- CrowdStrike Falcon (Enterprise tier, Complete for MDR) — the most-named EDR in carrier-recommended lists
- SentinelOne Singularity (Complete tier, Vigilance for MDR) — strong active-response and rollback capabilities
- Microsoft Defender for Endpoint Plan 2 — paid tier, qualifies as EDR; pairs with Microsoft Defender XDR for managed coverage or with third-party MDR partners
- Sophos Intercept X with Sophos MTR (managed threat response) — common in mid-market and SMB
- Cisco Secure Endpoint with SecureX and Cisco Talos MDR — strong fit for Cisco-heavy environments
- Huntress Managed EDR — bundled MDR-as-a-service, popular in SMB and MSP-delivered models
- Bitdefender GravityZone with MDR — competitive on price for mid-market deployments
- Trend Micro Vision One — strong fit for OT/IT convergence environments
Vendor choice matters less than the deployment discipline. A well-deployed Huntress installation passes audit; a poorly-deployed CrowdStrike installation fails it.
What BASG Does for South Florida Mid-Market
We deploy EDR with the carrier-evidence discipline built in from day one. That means a documented coverage report you can hand to your broker without re-engineering, an on-call MDR partnership (or your internal coverage, if that’s the model) with named SLAs, server-class EDR licensing on every Windows and Linux server, hypervisor coverage on ESXi and Hyper-V hosts, BYOD and contractor-device policy with enforcement evidence, and a quarterly tabletop that verifies the runbook actually fires.
Most of our managed IT services clients reach renewal with the evidence binder ready and walk out with flat or reduced premiums. Most of our cybersecurity services clients arriving at us mid-cycle land in one of two buckets: an EDR gap they didn’t know about, or an active-response misconfiguration that would have triggered denial. Both are fixable in weeks, not quarters.
If your cyber insurance renewal is on the horizon and you’re not sure whether your EDR coverage would survive a carrier audit, get in touch and we’ll do a 30-minute review against the underwriter checklist above. The 2026 cyber insurance market does not forgive EDR gaps. Better to find them now than at claim time.


