Why are so many insurance companies pulling out of providing coverage in Florida?

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Why are so many insurance companies pulling out of providing coverage in Florida?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

basically, it’s too expensive/not profitable to do business. florida has a lot of natural disasters. the whole way insurance works is that the premiums of customers pays for any losses from other customers. the losses claimed should be much less than premiums paid (that way the company makes money). for florida, it’s not the case.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Home insurance (and specifically reinsurance of insurance policies) and their related costs have soared drastically due to a string of really bad storm years.

Some insurers are partially or entirely leaving the market to avoid risk exposure

Anonymous 0 Comments

climate change altered the risk

the chance of catastrophic events or energetic storms is too great for the premiums to cover the costs of rebuilding entire cities from flood fire hurricane etc

it’s not just hurricanes. Florida is also prone to fire tornadoes floods etc

Anonymous 0 Comments

People are saying climate change and extreme weather. Which is partially true but not the major part. The big reason insurers are pulling out is Florida’s insurance laws there create an environment ripe for fraud and litigation. 9% of policy claims are filed in Florida, but 80% of lawsuits related to policy claims are in Florida.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Litigation is the main driver. Look at how hedge and investment firms have bought up law firms as they know money can be made suing insurance companies. Florida did just make some significant changes to deter the lawsuits but before that law passed, there was literally over 30,000 suits filed just to get them in before the law passed. Public adjusters and attorneys are the main reason they left. Don’t get me wrong, public adjusters can be of value for an insured but with how Florida is, it’s all about the money and not the rights of the individual insured and making them whole after a claim occurs.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Insurance companies make money by charging premiums, and lose money when they pay out claims. With rising oceans and warmer waters, which directly leads to stronger hurricanes. The companies know that more and more frequent payouts are coming, so they either have to raise premiums to unaffordable levels, or pull out. More and more, they’re pulling out.

And as for the homeowners in Florida, state-run options may be plausible for a time, but that piggy bank will soon dry up, and voters won’t want to pay up to help some millionaire rebuild his house for the third time in five years.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Widespread insurance fraud. It’s the easiest state in the country to sue an insurer. Homeowner’s insurance fraud in Florida is a billion plus a year business. Along with Medicare fraud. A huge percentage of pill mills, steroid clinics and shit are also in Florida for that reason. Grifting the government and insurance companies are a huge industry down there and the insurance companies don’t see a way to operate profitably in that environment.

Anonymous 0 Comments

>Why are so many insurance companies pulling out of providing coverage in Florida?

Climate change is causing two thing, which are interrelated.

1) Sea level is rising. The sea level around Florida is up to 8 inches higher than it was in 1950, and it’s continuing to go up 1 inch every 3 years. So even without storms, parts of Florida that would not have flooded are now flooding.

2) Hurricanes are increasing in intensity. Even if the number of hurricanes isn’t higher in a given year, hurricanes this year are more intense than they were even a year ago because of the increased energy in the atmosphere each year. Therefore the amount insurance company’s must pay to those they insure has been increasing every year.

Combine these two and the actuary’s who advise insurance companies have been telling them to get the hell out of Florida for YEARS.

Anonymous 0 Comments

https://www.flgov.com/2023/05/31/governor-desantis-signs-consumer-protection-legislation-to-support-florida-policyholders-when-disaster-strikes/

Sounds like the new law makes Florida a more hostile jurisdiction to run an insurance business in.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Here is how it’s supposed to work. You pay for insurance. When something bad happens to your property, like it gets damaged in a hurricane, you make a claim on the insurance. Your roof has $10,000 in damages because a roofer told you that’s what it would cost to fix it, so you make a claim for $10,000. The insurance company looks at your roof too, says that seems right, and gives you $10,000. If this is the only damage/claim you have over 10 years and you pay $1000 a year for your insurance, then you and the insurance company had a fair deal. However, if five of your neighbors paid for the same insurance and the other four didn’t get damaged by a hurricane well, lucky for them and lucky for the insurance company who made pure profit by never having to pay out.

Now consider what happens if people start acting less than honestly. Maybe you have $10,000 of damages, but the roofer comes out and, feeling the pinch from a string of bad jobs or some unexpected costs, he inflates the price a bit saying it will cost $12,000. The insurance company takes a look and shrugs…might be a little bit higher than expected but it’s within a reasonable range, market rates and all that, let’s just pay it. The roofer smirks and decides well, I guess I’m going to charge a little extra whenever I know there’s insurance involved. And he does.

Over time, every contractor has this same experience. They all start charging more because why not. After all they are hardworking men and women out there roofing in the Florida heat and the insurance company has plenty of money. Screw them. Then the contractors start to get bolder. The insurance company always pays, right? Maybe you don’t need a new roof, just a repair…but the roofer says let’s tell them you need the whole thing done anyway. It’s a win/win. You get a “free” entirely new roof, I get a much bigger payday, and the insurance company will be just fine. So you make that claim. Maybe it doesn’t work. But one out of 10 times it does and it makes up for all the others, doesn’t it?

It keeps happening. Suddenly a water leak into the ceiling becomes an excuse to try and get insurance to fund a whole new kitchen renovation. Contractors are inflating prices by obscene margins. Somehow mold–something that is essentially unavoidable in a tropical state like Florida–becomes a toxic death sludge that warrants replacing your entire flooring with brand new hardwoods and maybe some new cabinets while we’re at it. Insurance keeps paying and paying until one day some guy at the top looks at the numbers and goes…uh oh. We are paying out way, way too much.

Then what happens? Insurance starts getting stingy. They double check everything. They crack down on fraud and they do it by refusing everyone. They don’t know who is scamming them so they have to assume it’s everyone until proven otherwise. They wield bureaucracy as a weapon. They start litigating. Insurance has tons of lawyers. Every lawyer saves them money so they hire thousands. They also start raising premiums because the cost of insuring people has gone up (sort of).

Except…now the people making honest to God real, meritorious claims are getting brow beaten into bad payouts. Or are getting denied outright. And they’re paying more premiums as well. It isn’t fair. So they lawyer up too. And the law says whichever lawyer wins gets to have their fees paid by the loser.

What happens then? The plaintiffs lawyers do the same thing as the grifting contractors. They inflate their bills. A homeowner gets an unfair denial of a $10,000 claim? Let’s quickly rack up $10,000 in legal fees and force the insurance to settle or spend twice that to fight it. Now insurance isn’t fighting against a $12,000 contractor bill inflated from $10k, their fighting a $20,000 claim with attorneys fees.

It becomes a war. Insurance doubles down. They fight harder in litigation. They reject more claims. They lobby and get the laws changed in their favor. The contractors keep inflating their costs because well, sometimes they still get them paid. The plaintiffs lawyers rush lawsuits into court in an attempt to get some fees incurred before insurance can offer to settle. They’re making plenty of money too, and so they fight even harder to win. The war escalates until litigation and all it’s time and extra cost is not the exception but rather the norm. Fighting and suing and accusing the other side of fraud or bad faith is just…part of the process. Now it takes months just to get a payout, if you manage to get one at all.

Meanwhile, regular people with no claims have no idea what is going on. They don’t see the war. They just see their premiums go up and up each year. And they hear all kinds of stories. Bobby’s insurance paid to renovate his entire kitchen. Betty’s insurance screwed her around for months while she had a hole in her roof.

And then on top of it all, on top of this big messy self-cannibalizing spiral of grifting and fighting and cost inflation that has nothing to do with risk distribution and everything to do with people just trying to get a little bit more than they deserve…you have climate change. More disasters. More flooding. Rising sea levels. Cost of insurance actually is going up, and it’s not just from rampant fraud. Not anymore.

How do we fix it? More regulation? State income tax on the wealthy to subsidize costs where needed? Pass laws that don’t exclusively cater to preserving insurance company profits and instead attempt to actually address the problem of claim inflation and bureaucratic bad faith? Are you kidding me?!? This is Florida. Republicans control everything and have for decades. And besides…those fixes all sound like they might not maximize our profits.

Time to cut losses and leave. This one isn’t getting fixed. That’s what the insurance companies decided, that’s what I did, and so should you if you are unfortunate enough to live in that god-foraken swamp state.

Tl:Dr Why Florida? Because everyone there is a piece of shit and has been for a long time.