Florida Insurance Claim Deadlines
14 days
To acknowledge your claim
90 days
To complete investigation
20 days
To issue payment
Under Florida Statutes § 626.9541 (Unfair Insurance Trade Practices) and § 627.70131, your insurer must follow these deadlines. The Florida Department of Financial Services enforces these requirements. Florida has a specific bad faith statute under § 624.155 requiring a Civil Remedy Notice before filing suit.
Common Water Damage Claim Issues
- Insurer's estimate ignores moisture behind walls, under flooring, or in subfloor cavities that require professional drying and remediation
- Adjuster uses unit pricing far below actual contractor rates for water extraction, drying equipment, and mold prevention treatments
- Claim is partially denied by classifying damage as 'gradual' or 'maintenance-related' when it resulted from a sudden, covered event
- Insurer excludes replacement of matched flooring, cabinets, or countertops — leaving you with mismatched materials
- Emergency mitigation costs (water extraction, temporary fans, dehumidifiers) are disputed or denied as unnecessary
- Insurer underestimates the scope of affected areas, claiming damage doesn't extend beyond visible waterlines
Why Florida Water Damage Claims Are Underpaid
- Water damage is difficult to fully assess without destructive testing — insurers use this ambiguity to minimize scope
- Hidden damage behind walls and under floors is routinely excluded from initial estimates
- Adjusters often use software pricing tools (like Xactimate) with outdated or below-market labor rates
- Mold remediation — often necessary after water events — is frequently excluded or capped at unreasonably low amounts
- Insurers apply aggressive depreciation to materials even when replacement cost coverage was purchased
- Matching requirements for flooring and cabinetry are denied despite being required under many state laws
What Your Florida Dispute Letter Should Include
- Citation of Florida Statutes § 626.9541 (Unfair Insurance Trade Practices) and § 627.70131 by name, putting your insurer on legal notice
- CC to the Florida Department of Financial Services at 200 East Gaines Street, Tallahassee, FL 32399
- An independent contractor estimate documenting the full scope of water damage, including areas behind walls and under floors
- Moisture readings or thermal imaging reports showing hidden damage the adjuster's estimate ignored
- Your state's unfair claims settlement practices act cited by name, putting the insurer on legal notice
- A line-by-line comparison showing where the insurer's estimate falls short of actual repair costs
- Reference to your state's matching requirements if the insurer refused to replace mismatched materials
- A firm 10 business day deadline for a revised offer or written justification for the underpayment
Insurer Tactics to Watch For
- Classifying sudden water damage as 'long-term seepage' or 'maintenance failure' to deny coverage entirely
- Sending their own preferred vendor who provides a low estimate instead of allowing your contractor
- Claiming mold was pre-existing rather than caused by the covered water event
- Using actual cash value (depreciated) pricing when your policy provides replacement cost coverage
- Delaying the claim investigation hoping you'll accept a low offer out of frustration while repairs are urgent
- Refusing to cover 'tear-out' costs — the demolition needed to access and repair hidden damage
More About Florida Insurance Laws
See all of Florida's insurance claim deadlines, regulator contact information, and dispute resources.
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