Legislation reform pushes back on insurance
'exploiting' policy holders
WPTV's Joel Lopez is sorting
through new findings on the insurance market here in Florida
that is revealing that homeowners in the Sunshine State are
paying some of the highest insurance |
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Article Courtesy of Channel 5 WPTV
By Joel Lopez
Published November 26, 2025
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WATCH VIDEO
'It shouldn’t have to come to that,' family
says after reaching out to WPTV about insurance claim
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PALM BEACH COUNTY — We're sorting
through new findings on the insurance market here in Florida that is
revealing that homeowners in the Sunshine State are paying some of the
highest insurance premiums in the nation.
A report by Bankrate.com found in Florida, homeowners are paying an
average of $5,838 per year on insurance premiums. That's roughly $3,000
more than the national average, putting Florida as the number 3 most
expensive states for homeowner insurance.
WPTV has heard from many
homeowners who said those numbers are more than statistics — they’re a
crisis.
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"I would say for retirees on a fixed
income, it's probably forcing people to move out of the
state, it's getting pretty expensive here," said West Palm
Beach homeowner Jeff Heun.
Heun told WPTV's Joel Lopez he used to pay $3,400 on his
homeowner's insurance when he lived at Prospect Park.
"Is that expense something that got more and more expensive
over the years?" Lopez asked, when he followed up.
"Oh yeah, everything's tripled. I was gonna file a claim but
I would have had my premiums doubled," said Huen, who said
he never used his homeowner's insurance, and that his new
house has much more affordable rates.
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"What's your message to state leaders?" asked Lopez.
"Do something," said Huen.
Another West Palm Beach resident said the combination of the cost of
living, rising homeowners insurance rates and mandatory wind coverage is
squeezing his household budget. He told WPTV he'd rather spend the money
on replacing windows and doors, but because of his mortgage he's
required to keep the coverage.
Some homeowners are going without insurance by choice. One woman told
WPTV she hasn't had homeowners insurance in 25 years and said if there
was an emergency, she would use the money she saved on not having the
annual coverage on repairs.
For many residents, the result is difficult choices: pay rising
premiums, drain savings, or go without coverage and risk devastating
expense after a disaster. Some who relied on insurance after disasters —
and struggled to get adequate payouts.
In Loxahatchee, Bob and Pam Fix turned to their insurer after a tornado
caused more than $40,000 in damage. Their company initially offered
$4,500 for repairs that was later increased to $7,000.
WPTV's Kate Hussey investigated, and the Fixes were ultimately approved
for $41,000, the amount they need to begin repairs.
It's been an issue WPTV has been working to find solutions on as they
said the affordability crisis is reaching it's breaking point.
"Unless this is reversed in Florida and beyond, I see a bigger problem
ahead," said Dr. Martin Weiss. He's the founder of Weiss Ratings, which
independently grades stocks, mutual funds, and financial institutions.
"We are here to empower consumers. Our job here is to provide the data
and make the public aware," said Weiss.
He's part of Unlocking America’s Future and Insurance Fairness Project'
along with Florida State Senator Carlos Guillermo Smith who is pushing
for more transparency between insurance companies and the profits with
affiliated managing general agents, to hold them accountable for
"exploiting" policy holders in Florida.
"Floridians cannot afford to pay the highest property insurance premiums
in the nation, which they currently do right now, simply in order to pay
inflated managing agent fees that really pad the pockets of affiliates
who have dodged accountability for too long," said Smith.
The challenge is that Florida has a super Republican majority and this
push is by Democratic state leaders. So how do they plan get the
proposed reforms passed? Smith said they're using a "throw everything at
the wall to see what will stick" approach: a wide-ranging agenda meant
to force action and generate discussions about what can pass in
Tallahassee.
"Some of the proposals that some of my senate democratic colleagues here
in the Florida senate have put forward as part of that full package are
already being given consideration and are being put on the agenda," said
Smith.
That includes legislation related to capping rate increases on more than
10-15% as well as measures to remove taxes on impact-resistant doors,
windows and garage doors.
Proponents believe the tax free benefit will encourage homeowners to
storm-proof their properties — steps that could lead to lower premiums
over time.
The stakes are high.
Recent figures show Florida is among the worst states for denied claims,
with just over 40% of claims closed with no payments.
Florida also leads the nation in dropped renewals, at 3.3%.
A later debate in Tallahassee will determine whether those pressures
translate into policy that eases the burden on Florida homeowners.
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