Almost one year ago, on 31 May 2023, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed sweeping insurance reform legislation into law.
At that time, the Florida insurance market was on life support. Homeowners insurance companies, stung by massive losses, were leaving the state. Several became insolvent. The state-run “insurer of last resort”, Citizens Property Insurance Company, became the insurer of first resort. Private insurers raised rates to nosebleed levels to keep up with policyholder claims. Reinsurance protection was getting prohibitively expensive and less available.
That was then. The situation now is much better. New capital is entering the market, Citizens is shrinking, and the Florida homeowners insurance market has turned a modest profit after seven years of red ink.
Reform legislation took direct aim at the cause of Florida insurance market travails – mountains of unmerited litigation brought by billboard lawyers working in cahoots with unscrupulous contractors shaking down insurance companies. The numbers tell the story: at the peak of its crisis Florida was home to 9 percent of the country’s homeowners insurance policies and homeowners property losses, yet it had 79 percent of the entire country’s homeowners insurance lawsuits.
HB 837 introduced several measures designed to stifle frivolous litigation. The law took aim at how attorneys calculate their fees – fee multipliers – and one-way attorney fees. It also trimmed the statute of limitations from four years to two years, and changed pure comparative negligence to modified comparative negligence.
Let’s see the numbers
Year-end 2023 Florida insurance market financial statistics show signs of improving health:
Encouraging signs
Prior to passage of tort reform, the tone of Florida insurance market discussions was all gloom and doom. Fast-forward to today, rates are stabilising, new companies with fresh capital are entering the market, Citizens is shrinking, and insurers are reporting a mild profit.
At a March 2024 Bermuda Risk Summit panel that included Florida Insurance Commissioner Mike Yaworsky, the tone of the discussion was positive, suggesting the market has finally turned the corner since “recent legislative changes in Florida … are beginning to heal a fractured residential property insurance market”.
Another sign of recovering health in Florida’s broader insurance market is continuing rate reductions for workers’ compensation insurance. For seven years running, workers’ compensation insurance rates have been declining, as a result of improved work safety conditions. Commissioner Yaworsky approved a 15.1 percent statewide rate decrease for 2024, lowering employers’ insurance costs.
The durability of Florida’s improving insurance will be tested by the response to elevated hurricane activity. With its 20 named storms, the 2023 Atlantic hurricane season was the fourth-most active ever, but only one hurricane made landfall in Florida – Hurricane Idalia. The year’s most catastrophic storms were not Florida-focused, with Hilary hitting California and Otis striking Mexico. The next test of the market’s mettle will be the 1 June reinsurance renewals, just prior to the historically active third quarter. Scientists will be studying sea temperatures and the El Niño effect, but it won’t hurt for Floridians and Florida insurance underwriters to knock on wood or cross fingers for a mild hurricane season.