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Emergency insurance assessment for Florida
policy holders shelved 2 years early |
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Article Courtesy of Florida Politics
By Drew Dixon
Published February 26, 2026
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An emergency assessment initiated more than two years
ago to pay for insurance bonds is coming to an early end.
The Florida Insurance Guaranty Association voted this month to eliminate
the 1% emergency assessment on Florida homeowner and business property
and casualty policies two years earlier than expected.
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The assessment was initiated on Oct. 1,
2023, to pay for bonds issued through the Florida Insurance
Assistance Interlocal Agency to help cover unearned premium
refunds through claims related to storm-related property
insurance filings.
Those assessments covered 10 homeowner insurance companies
that went insolvent.
The Association’s decision to end the assessment is expected
to save about $650 million that would have been racked up
and paid by Florida policyholders through Sept. 30, 2028.
There will still be a charged assessment of 1% through Sept.
30 this year, but it will end Oct. 1.
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Florida Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia said
the end of the emergency assessment is a positive sign for the state.
“It is always a good day when we can announce that
Florida families will see a reduction in their insurance premiums, and
this announcement is a huge win for Florida’s policyholders. When an
insurance company goes insolvent, it not only hurts its policyholders,
but it also hurts all policyholders in the state of Florida,” Ingoglia
said.
Insurance Commissioner Mike Yaworsky said the easing of the assessments
is largely due to insurance industry overhauls initiated by the state in
the past few years.
“The historic reforms by the Florida Legislature in 2022 continue to
reverberate through the market, and ending this assessment two years
early is yet another indicator that the insurance market has stabilized
and is producing savings for consumers,” Yaworsky said.
The Florida Insurance Guaranty Association was established in 1970 by
the Legislature to act as a safety net for Florida insurance
policyholders who file claims within a month of an insurer that becomes
insolvent. The Interlocal Agency of that Association, founded in 2006,
has a special purpose of issuing tax-exempt bonds to cover claims of
insolvent companies arising from hurricane-related losses.
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