In Northern Uganda, insurance has long been something people talk about only after disaster strikes, when a hospital bill arrives, when a breadwinner dies, when a family is pushed to the edge. For many, it has been less a tool for planning and more a reminder of risk.
That, insurers now say, is precisely the problem.
Across Gulu, Lira, and Soroti, SanlamAllianz Life Insurance Uganda is attempting to change not just how insurance is sold, but how it is understood. Instead of leading with fear—of illness, death, or loss—the company is leaning into something quieter but potentially more powerful: education.
The shift comes at a critical moment. Insurance penetration in Uganda remains low, particularly outside Kampala, where families often rely on informal safety nets such as savings groups and burial societies to weather financial shocks. These systems are familiar, trusted, and immediate. Insurance, by contrast, has often felt distant, both in concept and in practice.
For SanlamAllianz, rebuilding that connection begins with trust.
“SanlamAllianz Life is part of a group with over 106 years of experience in Africa. We understand that insurance only works when it is trusted, and trust has to be earned, not assumed. We are here to begin earning that trust in this region, not just to announce that we exist,” the company said in a statement.
That message is shaping how the campaign is being rolled out. Rather than focusing on product pitches, the insurer is engaging district leaders, religious institutions, business groups, and community organisations, spaces where conversations feel more familiar, and where trust already exists.
At the centre of the approach is a simple idea: before people can buy insurance, they need to understand it.
“We are committed to developing an insurance education programme for this region in local languages, for ordinary people. We are not asking for money. We are asking for access,” the company added.
It is a subtle but significant shift. For years, insurance marketing has often relied on worst-case scenarios, images of loss meant to provoke urgency. But in communities where incomes are tight and priorities immediate, fear alone has not translated into uptake. If anything, it has reinforced the perception that insurance is something abstract, even inaccessible.
In Northern Uganda, that perception is shaped by history as much as economics. Decades of conflict, followed by uneven recovery, have left many communities cautious about formal financial systems. Trust, once broken or absent, takes time to rebuild.
Industry observers say this is where education becomes essential, not just as a tool for awareness, but as a bridge between institutions and everyday life.
“Financial resilience is development. When a family is not wiped out by a medical bill or a breadwinner’s death, they remain productive,” the company noted, linking insurance directly to economic stability.
That connection is increasingly central to how insurers and regulators are thinking about the sector’s future.
In Gulu, discussions between SanlamAllianz and the Insurance Regulatory Authority of Uganda pointed to a broader shift underway. Stakeholders are beginning to recognise that expanding insurance coverage is not just about selling policies. It is about changing mindsets.
Part of that change involves rethinking how insurance is communicated, especially to younger audiences. The emphasis, participants noted, should move away from fear-based messaging and toward clear, relatable information that helps people see insurance as a practical tool rather than a distant concept.
“There is a shared responsibility for both the regulator and industry players to align, engage collaboratively, and build a unified voice that strengthens trust,” the company said, stressing that awareness and understanding must come before distribution.
The comparison often drawn is with banking. Once viewed with similar scepticism, banks have, over time, built trust through consistency, visibility, and public education. Insurance, many argue, is now at a similar crossroads.
For Northern Uganda, the stakes are particularly high.
The region represents both a challenge and an opportunity. Its economic structure, largely informal, deeply community-based, means that traditional insurance models do not always translate easily. But it also means that, if approached correctly, the potential for impact is significant.
By focusing on grassroots engagement and locally relevant solutions, SanlamAllianz hopes to close what is often referred to as the “protection gap”—the space between the risks people face and the financial tools available to manage them.
In practical terms, that could mean more families able to keep children in school after a crisis, more small businesses able to recover from setbacks, and fewer households pushed into poverty by unexpected shocks.
It is a long-term vision, one that depends as much on relationships as it does on products.
For now, the campaign is still in its early stages. Meetings continue. Conversations unfold. Radio programmes are planned. Messages are translated into local languages, reshaped to fit everyday realities.
The goal is not immediate conversion, but gradual understanding.
In a region where financial decisions are often guided by trust and lived experience, that may be the only approach that works.
Because in the end, the future of insurance in Uganda may not depend on how convincingly it can warn people about risk—but on how clearly it can show them a different kind of security.
