Florida Hurricane Season Strikes Insurance Industry in Turmoil
This is the conclusion of a timely report issued today by Weiss Ratings, the nation's only independent rating agency covering insurance companies. Based on official data from the
- In 2024, following two hurricanes that made landfall, insurers operating in
Florida denied damage payments to almost 47% of homeowners. - Nearly 13% of homeowners with denied claims filed lawsuits as their last recourse to get the money needed for home repairs.
"This is one of the most shocking trends I've seen in my 54 years tracking the industry," commented Dr.
The data indicates that many insurers, perhaps assuming that tort reform would help them get away with abusive practices, denied claims more aggressively, causing more, rather than fewer, lawsuits overall.
Here are the facts:
|
Companies Operating in Florida |
2024 |
2022 |
Change |
|
Claims closed with no payment as a % of total claims |
46.7 |
40.0 |
+17 % |
|
Lawsuits as a % of claims closed with no payment |
12.9 |
12.4 |
+4 % |
|
Notes: (1) We compare 2024 with 2022 because 2023 was a transition year when new laws restricting lawsuits were being enacted, prompting a rush by policyholders to sue and distorting the data for that year. (2) The closed claims data source is the Annual Statutory Financial Statements of insurers operating in |
|
|
Conduct Annual Statement (MCAS) issued by the |
In 2024, the first full year after the tort reform laws went into effect, insurers operating in
"No one on the outside seems to know what's really going on inside the insurance companies," Weiss added. "But I wouldn't be surprised if many insurers in the state pursued a deliberate strategy to deny claims more aggressively, thinking that tort reform would protect them and expecting it would sharply reduce the number of policyholder lawsuits. It looks like they were wrong. Tort reform failed, and their strategy backfired."
In 2022, before tort reform, for every thousand claims, their policyholders filed 124 lawsuits against them. In 2024, after tort reform, that number actually rose to 129 per thousand.
In contrast, among home insurers operating in all jurisdictions outside
This means that, compared to the rest of the nation,
Today, the
"All the facts reveal a classic example of failure," Weiss concluded. "Insurers abuse their own customers, blame their own customers and then get legislatures to protect them from their own customers' ire. In the end, it only makes things worse for both sides. It's about time they learn the lesson from insurers who do right for their customers, rarely denying legitimate claims and rarely getting sued."
The Weiss report can also serve as a lesson for any other state that might try to follow
A consumer's best defense is to check each company's history of denials before buying or renewing home insurance, and with this table, Weiss Ratings is the nation's only organization that makes the needed data readily available to the public. In addition, to see how often homeowners file lawsuits in each state or jurisdiction, see this map.
About Weiss Ratings: Weiss rates 53,000 institutions and investments, including safety ratings on insurers, banks and credit unions, as well as investment ratings on stocks, ETFs, mutual funds and cryptocurrencies. Since its founding in 1971, Weiss Ratings has never accepted any form of payment from rated entities for its ratings. All Weiss insurance company ratings are available at https://weissratings.com/en/insurance.
The
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SOURCE Weiss Ratings



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