Florida’s Property Insurance Battle Heats Up as 2026 Looms

Florida townhomes aerial view

Florida’s insurance market is once again taking center stage, and the political arena is gearing up for a showdown that may define the 2026 election cycle. Homeowners, condo associations, landlords, and everyday drivers continue battling soaring premiums, while both state parties push competing stories about what’s happening—and what comes next.

Reforms Are Working, Republicans Say

Florida CFO Blaise Ingoglia is doubling down on the state’s sweeping insurance reforms, arguing that the worst is finally behind us. He highlights litigation cleanups, fraud crackdowns, and a reshaped reinsurance landscape as clear momentum.

“Clearly the reforms are working,” Ingoglia said, pointing to early signs such as Progressive returning $1 billion to policyholders and State Farm cutting auto rates by 10%.

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While acknowledging continuing pressure on homeowners, Ingoglia notes that more carriers are returning to Florida and reinsurance pricing is gradually easing—two major ingredients, he argues, for meaningful relief ahead.

Democrats Push Back: “Families Can’t Wait”

Democratic leaders counter that Floridians remain among the hardest‑hit insurance consumers in the United States. Senate Minority Leader Lori Berman has emphasized that insurance premiums—not property taxes—are Florida’s real affordability crisis.

Fresh national housing data supports her concerns: Florida condo prices have dropped more than 8%, fueled by steep HOA assessments and post‑Surfside insurance spikes. Five Florida metros now rank in the top ten for highest insurance burdens nationwide.

Bankrate reports Floridians pay over $4,100 per year for auto insurance—the highest rate in America.

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House Minority Leader Fentrice Driskell argues that Florida needs clearer rate‑hike caps, greater transparency, and stronger incentives that reward storm‑hardening instead of shifting costs onto homeowners.

2026: The Big Showdown

Insurance will almost certainly dominate Florida’s 2026 political season. From families squeezed by premiums to businesses weighing risk exposure to real estate professionals navigating a more unpredictable market, affordability is now the defining issue of the moment.

Lawmakers return to Tallahassee on January 13, preparing for what many expect to be a headline battle over how fast—if at all—the insurance market is stabilizing.

Why This Matters for Real Estate and Licensing Professionals

For Florida agents, brokers, appraisers, and property managers, insurance market conditions directly influence homebuying demand, condo lending, closings, and long‑term property values. Understanding these policy battles is becoming just as essential as understanding the MLS itself.

Cameron Academy continues empowering real estate professionals by keeping them informed about industry‑shaping changes like these. Whether you’re renewing your Florida real estate license or stepping into the industry for the first time, understanding insurance trends is quickly becoming core local knowledge.

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Florida’s Home Insurance Crisis Hits Breaking Point as Premiums Soar and Claims Go Unpaid

Florida homeowners now pay an average of $5,838 per year for insurance—about $3,000 more than the national average—pushing many families to the financial brink. Residents report premiums tripling, claims being severely underpaid, and insurers dropping policies at one of the highest rates in the country. As frustration mounts, lawmakers and industry experts are calling for sweeping reforms to curb rising costs, increase accountability, and stabilize a market that’s reshaping real estate decisions across the state.

Citizens Insurance Steps Back as Florida’s Private Market Surges

Florida’s insurance market has hit a major turning point. Citizens Property Insurance—once the state’s largest insurer with 1.4 million policies—has shed more than 900,000 policies as private insurers return in force. Driven by Florida’s depopulation program and the arrival of 17 new companies, nearly 200,000 policies shifted to private carriers in October alone, with about 40 percent offering lower premiums. The shift signals rising competition, stabilizing rates, and new opportunities for homeowners and industry professionals navigating Florida’s evolving insurance landscape.

NAR Unveils Biggest MLS Policy Overhaul in 20 Years, Effective 2026

The National Association of REALTORS® has approved 18 major updates to modernize its MLS policies—the largest overhaul in two decades. Announced at NAR NXT in Houston and set to take effect in January 2026, the changes aim to streamline MLS operations, improve enforcement clarity, and better align policies with how today’s real estate professionals actually work.

Inhabit Unveils New AI and Fraud Prevention Tools Transforming Property Management

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Florida’s Insurance System Is Shifting Again—But Are Homeowners Still in the Danger Zone?

Florida’s latest round of insurance reforms was meant to calm a volatile market, yet many experts warn the same deep structural problems remain. Homeowners are being pushed from Citizens into higher‑priced, lightly capitalized private insurers, ratings agencies face scrutiny for inflated grades, and political influence clouds oversight. For real estate and insurance professionals, these trends signal ongoing risk, rising costs, and a market in need of a complete rebuild.