Skip to content

Insurance Agency Times

HelpingClicks Corp D/B/A The Insurance School of TampaBay

Menu
  • Consumer Questions and Answers
  • Welcome
  • Home
Menu

NEW FLORIDA P&C LAWS 2026

Posted on April 3, 2026

Florida’s insurance landscape has undergone significant shifts due to a series of legislative reforms enacted between 2023 and early 2026. These laws are primarily designed to stabilize the market by reducing litigation, increasing transparency, and mandating flood coverage. [1, 2, 3, 4]

  1. Property & Homeowners Insurance

Recent laws aim to lower premiums by curbing “frivolous” lawsuits and managing the risk of the state-backed “insurer of last resort,” Citizens Property Insurance. [5, 6, 7, 8]

  • Mandatory Flood Insurance (Phased Implementation):
    • 2025: Required for homes valued over $500,000.
    • 2026: Required for homes valued over $400,000.
    • 2027: Required for all Citizens policyholders, regardless of location or home value.
  • New Resolution Process (HB 459): Effective in 2026, this creates a structured administrative path for disputed claims to be resolved through the Division of Administrative Hearings before going to court.
  • Roof Age Protections (HB 815): Starting July 1, 2026, insurers cannot refuse to renew a policy solely based on the age of a roof if it is in good condition.
  • Ending “One-Way” Attorney Fees: Legislation has eliminated the rule that required insurers to pay a plaintiff’s legal fees if they lost a case, a move intended to reduce legal costs passed on to consumers.
  • Ban on Assignment of Benefits (AOB): Policyholders can no longer sign over their insurance benefits directly to contractors (e.g., roofers or water mitigation companies), which was previously a major driver of fraud. [2, 4, 9, 10, 11]
  1. Auto Insurance Changes

Florida is transitioning toward a “fault-based” system to address some of the highest premiums in the country. [12]

  • PIP Repeal (Proposed/Scheduled 2026): Legislation (HB 1181) proposes repealing the “No-Fault” Personal Injury Protection (PIP) system by July 1, 2026.
  • Mandatory Bodily Injury (BI) Coverage: If the PIP repeal takes effect, drivers will be required to carry minimum BI liability of $25,000 per person and $50,000 per occurrence.
  • Rate Reductions: As of early 2026, top auto insurers like GEICO, Progressive, and State Farm have filed for rate decreases averaging 8% to 10% due to these reforms. [13, 14, 15]
  1. Specialized & Consumer Protections
  • Pet Insurance (HB 655): Effective January 1, 2026, pet insurance is officially classified as “property insurance,” requiring companies to provide clear disclosures on claim formulas and allowing a 30-day “free look” period for full refunds.
  • Health Insurance Overpayments (SB 1808): Healthcare providers must now refund patient overpayments within 30 days of identification or face fines.
  • Breast Exam Coverage (SB 158): State employee health plans must now cover diagnostic and supplemental breast exams (like MRIs) without co-pays or deductibles. [16, 17, 18, 19]

Current Market Impact (April 2026)

Recent reports from the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) indicate that these reforms are beginning to show results: [20, 21]

  • Litigation Decline: Property claim litigation dropped by approximately 25% in 2025.
  • Rate Relief: In early 2026, several private carriers, including Florida Peninsula, announced statewide rate reductions. [22, 23]

Would you like me to look up specific premium reduction percentages for your current insurance carrier?

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Insurance School of TampaBay Faculty

Christopher P Kazor, CIC, LUTCF, CDEI

Michael A. 'Mike' Petruccelli 

Karin M. Woofter, RSSA®, CLU®, LUTCF

Article Contributors

Karin M. Woofter, RSSA®, CLU®, LUTCF

Carlos Pratts

J Christopher Rushton

Charles Robson, CIC

Admin Staff

Chandler Martin - Testing Center Administrator

©2026 Insurance Agency Times | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme