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Probable Maximum Loss Estimation

Probable maximum loss (PML) estimation reads a tail loss, the loss associated with a chosen rare return period or exceedance probability, from the loss exceedance curve produced by a probabilistic risk or catastrophe model. Where average annual loss summarizes the mean of the loss distribution, PML characterizes its extreme: a 1-in-250-year PML is the loss level exceeded with one percent probability in a year (a 0.4 percent probability for 1-in-250). Patricia Grossi and Howard Kunreuther's 2005 volume sets out PML and the exceedance-probability curve as core catastrophe-model outputs, and Kirsten Mitchell-Wallace and colleagues' 2017 practitioner's guide details how the industry computes and uses PML, including the crucial distinction between occurrence and aggregate exceedance. PML is the metric that drives solvency capital, reinsurance purchase, risk appetite, and regulatory stress tests, because catastrophe risk is about surviving the rare bad year, not the average one. It is a percentile (value-at-risk) of the loss distribution and therefore inherits both the power and the fragility of tail estimation. Defining it precisely, return period, occurrence versus aggregate, and uncertainty, is essential to using it responsibly.

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Sources

  1. Grossi, P., & Kunreuther, H. (Eds.) (2005). Catastrophe Modeling: A New Approach to Managing Risk. Springer. ISBN: 9780387241050
  2. Mitchell-Wallace, K., Jones, M., Hillier, J., & Foote, M. (Eds.) (2017). Natural Catastrophe Risk Management and Modelling: A Practitioner's Guide. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN: 9781118906040

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Probable Maximum Loss Estimation (Return-Period Tail Loss from a Risk Model). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/disaster-studies/probable-maximum-loss-estimation

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ScholarGateProbable Maximum Loss Estimation (Probable Maximum Loss Estimation (Return-Period Tail Loss from a Risk Model)). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/disaster-studies/probable-maximum-loss-estimation · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026