
What You Should Know
- The News: Indigo, an AI-driven medical professional liability platform, has raised $50M in an oversubscribed Series B financing led by Rubicon Founders, with participation from Town Hall Ventures and Optum Ventures.
- The Tech: The company uses a proprietary AI platform called “Lux” to automate the complex underwriting process for medical malpractice. By the end of 2025, the platform was automatically underwriting 20% of all submissions.
- The Scale: Founded in 2023, Indigo has rapidly grown to insure nearly 1,000 providers and surpassed $10M in premiums, proving that “Vertical AI” can successfully penetrate even the most conservative legacy insurance markets.
Can Algorithms Price a Doctor’s Risk?
For decades, medical professional liability (malpractice) insurance has been a bastion of manual labor. Assessing the risk of a neurosurgeon versus a pediatrician involved stacks of paper, weeks of waiting, and human underwriters making subjective calls.
Today, Indigo, announced a $50M Series B financing to prove that Artificial Intelligence can do it faster, cheaper, and more accurately. Led by existing investor Rubicon Founders and joined by heavyweights like Town Hall Ventures and Optum Ventures, the round is a significant validation of the “Vertical AI” thesis—the idea that AI is most powerful not when it is broad (like ChatGPT), but when it is deeply integrated into a specific, complex industry.
Automating the Un-Automatable
At the heart of Indigo’s pitch is “Lux,” a proprietary platform that replaces the traditional actuary’s spreadsheet with machine learning models. In the insurance world, “speed” usually comes at the cost of “discipline.” If you quote too fast, you miss risks. Indigo claims to have broken this trade-off. By ingesting vast amounts of data to model physician risk profiles, Lux allows brokers to get quotes instantly rather than waiting days.
The metrics suggest the system is working. By the end of 2025—less than two years after the company’s launch—20% of all submissions were fully underwritten automatically. In a sector as high-stakes as medical liability, where a single bad claim can cost millions, entrusting one-in-five decisions to an algorithm is a massive leap in confidence.
Breaking the Legacy Moat
The medical liability market has traditionally been protected by its own complexity. Legacy carriers survived because the barrier to entry—understanding the nuance of medical risk—was too high for tech disruptors.
Indigo is bypassing that barrier by combining insurance veterans with AI talent. The company has already scaled to nearly 1,000 providers nationwide and surpassed $10 million in premiums.
“Indigo represents exactly the type of category-defining opportunity we look for,” noted David Whelan, Co-Founder & General Partner at Town Hall Ventures. “By layering machine learning over deep insurance expertise, they’ve built a defensible moat… ultimately driving down premiums for high-quality medical groups.”
Ease of Doing Business
This funding will be used to expand R&D and deepen distribution partnerships. For brokers, who often act as the gatekeepers in this industry, the promise is “ease-of-doing-business.” In 2026, the broker’s greatest pain point is friction—chasing down doctors for forms and nagging underwriters for quotes. By automating the “grunt work” of underwriting, Indigo isn’t just lowering its own operational costs; it is making the broker’s life easier.
As Matt Kim, Co-Founder at Rubicon Founders, puts it: “Their vertical AI strategy isn’t incremental—it fundamentally redefines how risk is assessed, priced, and managed.”

