HomeInsuranceFlorida Legislature opens special session on property insurance

Florida Legislature opens special session on property insurance


Florida lawmakers opened a special session Monday addressing property insurance, worsened since Hurricane Ian.
  • Proposals being considered will encourage homeowners to use state-backed Citizens as last resort again
  • Some changes will make suing more expensive and more complicated for homeowners
  • A bill would offer tax relief to people with homes damaged by Hurricane Ian or Tropical Storm Nicole

TALLAHASSEE — Florida lawmakers opened a special session Monday on the state’s crumbling property insurance market — with proposals certain to make many homeowners pay more for coverage in coming months. 

An immediate target: Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the state-backed insurer of last resort which has doubled in size over the past two years.  

With 1.1 million customers now, pending legislation would bar people from renewing the cheaper coverage if a private insurer offered a policy within 20% of Citizens’ premium. 

New Citizens’ customers in a flood zone also would for the first time be required to have flood insurance, beginning in April. Homeowners renewing Citizens’ policies in flood-prone areas would need the added coverage by July. 

“We take a hard look at where Citizens should be,” said Senate Banking and Insurance Chair Jim Boyd, R-Bradenton, who runs an insurance company, in describing the bill, (SB 2A). 



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