Progressive reported a notable jump in fourth-quarter profitability as robust demand for personal auto coverage translated into stronger premium flows and higher earnings.
For the three months ended Dec. 31, the insurer said profit rose to $2.95 billion, or $5.02 per share, up from $2.36 billion, or $4.01 per share, a year earlier - an increase of roughly 25% on a per-share and aggregate basis. Net premiums written climbed 8% to $19.51 billion in the quarter, reflecting an increase in personal lines business.
Policy counts expanded meaningfully. At the end of 2025 Progressive reported 37.4 million personal lines policies in force, 11% higher than a year earlier. Agency-sold auto policies increased by 10% while direct auto policies were up 14%, underscoring continued consumer demand across distribution channels.
On underwriting performance, the company logged a combined ratio of 88% for the quarter compared with 87.9% a year earlier. By convention, a combined ratio below 100% indicates that premiums collected exceeded paid claims and expenses in the period.
Progressive reiterated its positioning as the second-largest personal auto insurer in the United States. Its product mix covers personal and commercial autos and trucks, motorcycles, boats, recreational vehicles, and homeowners insurance - consistent with its broad personal lines footprint.
In a separate announcement, Progressive said Chief Financial Officer John Sauerland will retire on July 3 following a 35-year tenure at the company, which included 10 years as CFO. The insurer named Chief Strategy Officer Andrew Quigg as Sauerland's expected successor; Quigg will work with Sauerland over the coming months to facilitate a planning and leadership handover.
Progressive's shares have underperformed benchmark equities this year, with the stock down 8.6% year-to-date and slipping 5% in 2025. That share-price weakness accompanies the company results and the disclosed leadership transition.
Summary
Progressive posted a 25% increase in quarterly profit driven by higher personal auto premium volumes and wrote $19.51 billion in net premiums during the quarter. The insurer recorded an 11% rise in personal lines policies in force and maintained a combined ratio of 88%. CFO John Sauerland will retire on July 3 after 35 years, and Chief Strategy Officer Andrew Quigg is expected to succeed him following a transition period.
Key points
- Profit and premiums: Fourth-quarter profit rose to $2.95 billion ($5.02 per share) while net premiums written increased 8% to $19.51 billion.
- Policy growth: Personal lines policies in force reached 37.4 million, up 11% year-over-year, with agency and direct auto policies up 10% and 14%, respectively.
- Leadership change: Longtime CFO John Sauerland will retire on July 3; Andrew Quigg is expected to assume the CFO role after a transition period.
Risks and uncertainties
- Leadership transition risk - The departure of a decade-long CFO introduces execution and stewardship risks during the transition period as responsibilities shift to the expected successor.
- Claims and underwriting volatility - The combined ratio moved only marginally and remains subject to claims experience from accidents and natural disasters, which the company cited as ongoing drivers of insurance demand.
- Market performance risk - Progressive's shares have declined year-to-date and during 2025, reflecting investor reassessment of the stock despite the quarter's profit gains.