Florida’s Home Insurance Shake-Up: New Names, Old Problems

Storm-damaged florida home

Florida’s home insurance market has become the state’s most expensive game of déjà vu. Despite bold reforms and confident promises, Floridians are still facing soaring premiums, shrinking coverage options, and mounting uncertainty each hurricane season. A recent deep‑dive by The American Prospect reveals why the “new” insurance landscape feels uncomfortably similar to the one that collapsed after Hurricane Andrew.

Gov. Ron DeSantis’s 2022 reforms were pitched as a stabilizing force after Hurricane Ian, but the evidence suggests they’ve recreated many of the same structural weaknesses that triggered earlier insurer failures—leaving homeowners, real estate professionals, and insurance agents navigating a treacherous landscape of financial risk.

The Depopulation Game and the Return of Risky Insurers

At the heart of the insurance overhaul is the depopulation of Citizens Property Insurance Corporation—the state’s “insurer of last resort.” More than 355,000 homeowners have been shifted from Citizens into private insurers, many of which charge higher premiums and show signs of shaky financial footing.

The market‑friendly reforms Gov. DeSantis passed in the wake of Hurricane Ian have failed to stabilize the state’s insurance market.

The analysis highlights a troubling trend: several newly approved insurance companies have direct connections to firms that previously collapsed. A standout example is Viceroy Preferred Insurance Company, which shares board members with Monarch National—a company fined for mishandled claims and formerly linked to another insurer that ultimately went insolvent.

Ratings Agencies Under the Microscope

Adding another twist, many of these insurers carry strong ratings from Demotech—a ratings agency that receives payments from the very companies it evaluates. Meanwhile, independent agency Weiss Ratings reports that 14 Florida insurers closed more than half of homeowner claims with zero payout in 2024.

Slide Insurance, one of Florida’s newest market entrants, closed over half its claims without payment—yet still holds an “A” rating from Demotech, while Weiss assigns it a stark “C‑.” This rating gulf has become too large for industry experts to ignore.

Politics, Profits, and Luxury Homes

The investigation also reveals eyebrow‑raising compensation details. Slide Insurance’s CEO and COO—who are married—took home tens of millions in earnings while residing in a lavish 9,600‑square‑foot waterfront home featured in Tampa Magazine. Meanwhile, Slide ranked among the insurers most likely to deny homeowners’ storm‑related claims.

Add political contributions to high‑profile Florida candidates into the mix, and the picture becomes even more complex.

Calls for Change: A Market Built on Sand

Experts interviewed in the report argue that Florida’s insurance system needs more than surface‑level fixes. They call for unified regulatory oversight, transparent rating standards, and stronger accountability—especially as climate risks intensify year after year.

As one analyst summarized: “We effectively have to build the market from scratch.”

What This Means for Real Estate Professionals

For Florida’s real estate agents, brokers, appraisers, mortgage lenders, property managers, and insurance professionals, understanding this evolving landscape is crucial. Insurance availability and affordability directly influence home sales, property values, and buyer confidence—making awareness a professional necessity.

At Cameron Academy, we continue helping Florida professionals stay ahead of these industry shifts—whether you’re renewing your real estate license, branching into insurance, or entering a new professional field. In a market this volatile, education isn’t optional—it’s your strongest safeguard.

To read the full investigative report, visit The American Prospect.

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