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BILL • US SENATE

S 4395

Terrorism Risk Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2026

119th Congress
Introduced by Angela Alsobrooks, Jim Banks, Lisa Blunt Rochester and 22 other co-sponsors

Extends the Terrorism Risk Insurance Program through 2034 and shifts recoupment timelines, preserving access to terrorism insurance while spreading federal costs.

Introduced in Senate
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Bill Summary · S 4395

Overview

  • Bill: S. 4395 (119th Congress)
  • Title: Terrorism Risk Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2026
  • Purpose: Reauthorize and extend the federal Terrorism Risk Insurance Program (TRIP) established by the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of 2002 (TRIA) for seven additional years.
  • Introduced: April 27, 2026, in the Senate; cosponsors include a broad bipartisan group.
  • Referral: Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.

Main purpose and intent

  • Extend the government–backed framework that shares the financial risk of large-scale terrorism insurance losses between the private market and the federal government.
  • Provide continued availability and affordability of terrorism insurance for businesses by maintaining the TRIA program mechanism.

Key provisions and changes

  • Termination date extension:
    • Amends Section 108(a) of TRIA to extend the program’s termination date from 2027 to 2034 (a 7-year extension).
  • Mandatory recoupment timing adjustments:
    • Adjusts recoupment schedules in Section 103(e)(7)(E)(i) to shift several milestone dates forward.
    • Subclause (I):
    • Update: replace 2022 with 2029; replace 2024 with 2031.
    • Subclause (II):
    • Updates: replace 2023 with 2030; replace 2029 with 2036; replace 2024 with 2031.
    • Subclause (III):
    • Updates: replace 2029 with 2036; replace 2024 with 2031.
  • Overall effect of changes:
    • Extends the period during which the federal government can participate in providing insurance backstop for terrorism risks.
    • Delays certain mandatory recoupment and repayment milestones, effectively spreading potential GOP (guaranteed) costs over a longer horizon.

Note: The bill text provided focuses on the extension and specific recoupment timing changes. It does not detail other possible TRIA provisions that sometimes accompany reauthorizations (e.g., changes to trigger thresholds, caps, program triggers, or premium contribution structures). The summary reflects the explicit provisions included in the bill text.

Who would be affected

  • Insurers and insurance policyholders:
    • Continued access to terrorism risk coverage enabled by the TRIP backstop, promoting market stability and affordability.
  • Businesses:
    • Entities seeking terrorism insurance (e.g., property, casualty, and casualty lines) would maintain coverage options in the face of potentially high terrorism loss exposure.
  • Federal government:
    • Maintains a backstop role, with adjusted timing for recoupment and potential federal outlays tied to terrorism-related insurance losses.
  • taxpayers (indirectly):
    • Recoupment provisions imply potential repayment to the federal government from insurers after stabilization losses, subject to the revised timelines.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • Status: Introduced in the Senate and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
  • Effective dates:
    • Termination date moved from 2027 to 2034.
    • Recoupment milestone adjustments take effect per the amended subclauses, with deadlines shifted forward (e.g., 2022→2029, 2024→2031, etc.).
  • Next steps (typical for such bills):
    • Committee consideration and markup.
    • Potential floor action in the Senate, and later House consideration (or conference if there are differences with companion bills).

Practical takeaway

S. 4395 seeks to ensure the continued operation and financial viability of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Program by extending its authorization through 2034 and recalibrating the mandatory cost-recovery timeline for the federal government. The changes aim to preserve access to terrorism insurance for businesses while spreading any federal recoupment costs over a longer period.

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