Florida’s Property Insurance Crisis: Why Lawmakers Can’t Afford to Look Away

Homeowner inspecting storm-damaged home

Florida is many things—sunny, unpredictable, hurricane-prone, and lately, the most expensive state in America for property insurance. While homeowners watch premiums soar and coverage shrink, lawmakers in Tallahassee appear focused on everything except the crisis unfolding at kitchen tables across the state.

This breakdown comes from a powerful editorial by the Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board, raising a pressing question: Are Florida’s leaders prioritizing political theater over the real, urgent needs of their constituents?

The Insurance Reality Floridians Are Facing

If you’re a homeowner—or work in Florida real estate, insurance, or mortgage—you’ve likely felt the pressure firsthand:

  • Home insurance premiums are roughly three times the national average.
  • Some homeowners are now paying more than $10,000 a year for modest properties.
  • Coverage continues shrinking while deductibles grow.
  • 47% of homeowners’ claims were denied without payout in 2024.

For families and small business owners, these aren’t abstract statistics—they’re life-altering obstacles. Some are abandoning homes they planned to retire in. Others are shuttering businesses built over decades.

How Did We Get Here?

The Legislature passed multiple “reforms” in 2021–2022 promising stability and reduced premiums. But instead of relief, Floridians faced even higher rates. Meanwhile, new restrictions made it harder for consumers to file claims, challenge denials, or hire legal help.

Insurers now have expanded time to respond to claims, while policyholders must act faster than ever. Even when consumers manage to win appeals, insurers are no longer obligated to repay attorney fees—one of the key reasons 90% of denial appeals fail.

These moves may please insurers and investors, but they’ve left everyday Floridians startlingly exposed.

Bills That Could Help—But Aren’t Moving

Despite mounting pressure, two promising reform bills aren’t even receiving committee assignments:

  • SB 128 – Grants homeowners the right to obtain an independent roof inspection before an insurer denies a claim.
  • SB 320 – Requires insurers to provide access to financial data used to justify rate increases.

Both bills signal transparency, fairness, and accountability—yet they remain stuck in legislative limbo.

Where Are Lawmakers’ Priorities?

Rather than addressing insurance relief, lawmakers are moving forward with unrelated agenda items:

  • Restrictions on how teens receive medical treatment
  • Policies that make it easier for developers to bypass local government decisions
  • Property-tax cuts that could jeopardize essential city and county services

Important issues? Certainly. But not nearly as urgent as the tens of thousands of Floridians being crushed under skyrocketing insurance premiums right now.

Why This Matters for Real Estate Professionals

At Cameron Academy, we’ve trained thousands of Florida real estate and insurance professionals. And one trend is clear: property insurance now influences every corner of a real estate transaction. Buyers hesitate. Deals collapse. Agents scramble to keep up with policy changes. Mortgage approvals stall. Inspections turn into high-stakes negotiations.

This isn’t simply a homeowner problem. It’s a full real estate ecosystem disruption—and professionals across Florida feel it daily.

The Bottom Line

Floridians deserve better. Their homes, livelihoods, and futures are at stake. When nearly half of all insurance claims are denied and premiums outpace wages, the crisis becomes unavoidable.

Lawmakers must take action—not later, not “when the time is right,” but right now.

For those in real estate, insurance, mortgage, or related fields, staying informed isn’t optional—it’s essential. And if you’re building your career through licensing or continuing education, institutions like Cameron Academy ensure you’re prepared for the rapidly shifting landscape shaped by Florida’s insurance volatility.

Source: Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board

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