Florida’s Insurance Chief Asks: Have You Actually Read Your Policy?

Most people don’t need help falling asleep, but if you live in hurricane-prone Florida, you might want to pour a strong coffee and crack open your homeowners insurance policy. Behind page after page of fine print, you’ll find details that could determine whether your next storm claim gets paid—or denied.

Storm debris in coastal florida neighborhood

Key highlights from the state’s latest insurance concerns:

• Florida’s insurance regulator wants simplified, shorter policy documents.
• Many homeowners misunderstand exclusions—especially water and flood limitations.
• Huge portions of hurricane claims are being closed without payment.
• Rising home replacement costs keep premiums high despite stabilization.

The Herald-Tribune’s full report dives deep into just how unreadable Florida policies have become. Some exceed 150 pages—and most homeowners never make it past the price tag.

The Commissioner Says Even Pros Don’t Read Them

Florida Insurance Commissioner Mike Yaworsky told legislators that even industry professionals struggle to fully digest a modern homeowners policy.

“In all likelihood, if I asked for a show of hands… I don’t know how many would say, ‘Yes’—I’ve read my insurance policy,” he admitted.

His mission: boil down these complex contracts so residents actually understand the protections they’re buying for the biggest investment of their lives.

Florida Homeowners Are Learning the Hard Way

Statistics from Hurricanes Milton and Helene show tens of thousands of homeowners didn’t get the payouts they expected. After Milton, 34%—over 111,000 claims—were closed with no payment. For Helene, more claims were denied than approved.

A big reason? Many Floridians didn’t realize hurricane insurance doesn’t cover flood damage—even if the flood happens during a hurricane. Storm surge is excluded unless you have a separate flood insurance policy.

Common homeowner surprises:

• Water-damage caps as low as $10,000
• “Managed repair” programs forcing use of designated contractors
• Flood damage excluded from hurricane coverage
• Deductibles shown as percentages, not clear dollar amounts

Experts Agree: Policies Are Confusing, and Costs Still Sting

Insurance agents and attorneys quoted in the story shared that even professionals skip fine print. Meanwhile, consumers remain laser-focused on one thing: price. Though rate spikes have cooled, Floridians still feel the pinch as home replacement costs soar.

Polls show property insurance has been the state’s top concern for years—with housing costs now tied for first place.

Why This Matters for Real Estate and Licensing Professionals

For real estate agents, mortgage professionals, adjusters, and insurance advisors, understanding the shifting Florida insurance landscape isn’t just helpful—it’s essential. Clients look to industry pros to explain risks, guide coverage decisions, and help them avoid costly misunderstandings.

This is exactly why ongoing education matters. At Cameron Academy, we train real estate, insurance, mortgage, and other licensed professionals across all 50 states—helping them stay sharp, informed, and prepared for changes like these.

Explore Courses at Cameron Academy

Bottom Line: Read Before the Storm

Florida homeowners may not enjoy flipping through 150 pages of exclusions and legalese—but doing so could be the difference between a lifesaver check and a painful denial after the next hurricane.

And if the Insurance Commissioner gets his way, those pages may finally become readable.

To read the full investigative report, visit the Herald-Tribune article here.

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