Every agent has one.
The underwriter who:
It’s easy to get frustrated.
It’s also easy to handle it wrong.
Because if every interaction turns into a battle, you might win the deal… but lose the relationship.
And that costs you more long-term.
Most “tough” underwriters aren’t trying to be difficult.
They’re trying to protect their book.
They’re dealing with:
So when they push back, it’s not personal.
It’s pressure.
If you treat it like a fight, it becomes one.
You send a submission.
They question it.
You push back.
Now it’s a standoff.
Instead of:
“Let me clarify that for you…”
It becomes:
“That’s not an issue.”
That tone shift matters.
You can’t “win” an argument with underwriting guidelines.
If something doesn’t fit, pushing harder doesn’t fix it.
Strong agents don’t argue the problem.
They reposition the risk.
Let’s be honest.
Sometimes the pushback is justified.
Missing info.
Unclear exposures.
No context.
If your submission creates questions, expect resistance.
Before they even respond, your submission should answer:
If they have to guess, they’ll assume worst case.
Spell it out.
This is where most agents separate themselves.
Instead of pushing back immediately:
“I understand why that stands out…”
Now you’re aligned instead of opposed.
That changes the entire conversation.
If there’s a problem, address it directly.
Underwriters don’t expect perfect accounts.
They expect explained ones.
The agent who controls the story controls the outcome.
Don’t let the underwriter piece the account together from scattered data.
Give them a clear picture upfront.
Clarity reduces friction.
Not every deal is worth forcing.
Sometimes the best move is:
“Understood. We’ll revisit when this changes.”
That earns respect.
And respect turns into flexibility later.
If every underwriting interaction feels difficult, step back.
It’s usually not the market.
It’s the positioning.
Strong agents don’t fight underwriters.
They make it easier for them to say yes.
You don’t win by overpowering underwriting.
You win by:
That’s what builds real relationships.
And those relationships make everything else easier.