Ian worsens Fla.'s property insurance market
It was nerve-wracking, the Stuart resident said. Though her policy is in effect through
Not only do
"That's just another thing you have to worry about. I have to go through the same thing I went through four months ago," said Noyes, 35, who lives in the Golden Gate neighborhood. "It was very upsetting. Now with the storm, it's probably going to be harder with more (carriers) dropping out of the
Hundreds of thousands of
Hurricane Ian property damage
Hurricane Ian may be
Hurricane Katrina, a Category 5 storm that devastated
This preliminary data encompasses a few factors, according to
Insured loss to residential, commercial and industrial properties and cars
Building, contents and time element losses
Privately insured loss from wind, storm surge and inland flooding
Estimated demand surge
Estimated impacts of excess litigation
More carriers could liquidate
These expensive property insurance claims and potential litigations will be detrimental to regional insurance carriers statewide, said
In July, the
"It's hard to predict" how Hurricane Ian will affect the insurance market, he said. "Most likely, there will be more failures of smaller, regional carriers. Based on what we're hearing, some of these insurers will not survive."
It's also possible more nationwide carriers will stop renewing or temporarily halt issuing
Since January, 16 companies have announced policy moratoriums statewide. So far, no other carriers have made similar declarations since Hurricane Ian, Friedlander said.
Before Ian, there were already over 130,000 active property claim lawsuits – mostly from fraudulent roofing schemes, he said.
Unethical roofing contractors solicited homeowners, enticing them with a free inspection and offering to handle repairs directly with insurers. When insurers wouldn't pay for wear-and-tear, contractors would sue the carriers – and win. Insurers then had to pay for the roof repairs as well as the court costs.
More lawsuits are imminent.
"They're literally walking through neighborhoods. They're proactively approaching victims of Hurricane Ian, who are suffering probably the worst they've ever seen in their lives," Friedlander said.
Insurance premiums to increase
Though
Those who can't afford these skyrocketing prices turn to
Citizens, which holds over 1 million policies, saw a 29% increase in policies from January to mid-July. If Citizens' reserves are wiped out,
Uninsured
There is no way to know exactly how many of the roughly 400,000
It's believed "most" were able to find coverage, he said. In July, the
An estimated 12% of
"The primary driver behind that is the cost of insurance," he said, adding that homeowners insurance is required only if there is a mortgage loan on the property. "It's not required, so they're not going to pay for it."
There are federal initiatives, including the national flood insurance program and the
President
That's despite new legislation in May that steered
Pay hurricane damage claims
Limit lawsuits against companies
Have homeowners shoulder more of the cost for roof replacements.
"It's a very treacherous market right now," Friedlander said. "We expect the market to be more unstable than it has been."



Ian worsens Fla.'s unstable property insurance market
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