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2022 — Florida Homeowners Reforms (SB 2‑A & SB 2‑D)

Category: Homeowners Insurance • Litigation Reform • Market Stabilization Date: May 2022 and December 2022 (Special Sessions)

Summary

By 2022, Florida’s homeowners‑insurance market was in crisis. Carriers were failing, reinsurance costs were exploding, litigation was consuming billions in defense and indemnity, and Citizens Property Insurance Corporation,Florida’s state‑run insurer of last resort. was ballooning toward 1 million policies. In response, the Florida Legislature passed two sweeping reform packages — SB 2‑D (May 2022) and SB 2‑A (December 2022) — aimed at stabilizing the market by reducing litigation incentives, curbing assignment‑of‑benefits (AOB) abuses, strengthening insurer solvency, and shifting more risk back to policyholders.

These reforms represent the most significant overhaul of Florida’s property‑insurance system since Hurricane Andrew.

Background

Florida’s homeowners market had been deteriorating for years due to:

By 2022, the system was structurally unsustainable.

What Happened

1. SB 2‑D (May 2022 Special Session)

Focused on immediate stabilization:

This was the “stop the bleeding” bill.

2. SB 2‑A (December 2022 Special Session)

This was the transformational package — the one that rewired the system.

Key provisions:

This bill fundamentally changed the economics of litigation in Florida.

Claims Impact

1. Litigation volume dropped sharply

With one‑way attorney fees eliminated and AOB banned:

2. Claims timelines tightened

Shorter deadlines forced:

3. Fraud and solicitation pressure eased

Contractor‑driven roof‑replacement schemes became less profitable.

4. Carriers gained more control over claim costs

The reforms shifted leverage away from plaintiff attorneys and toward insurers.

Regulatory / Legal Impact

1. End of one‑way attorney fees

This was the single most consequential change. For decades, Florida’s one‑way fee statute made litigation a no‑risk, high‑reward strategy for plaintiff attorneys. Its elimination removed the core economic engine of Florida’s litigation crisis.

2. End of AOB in property insurance

AOB had become a pipeline for inflated claims and fee‑driven lawsuits. Banning it was a structural reset.

3. Citizens reforms

4. Stronger solvency oversight

OIR gained more tools to intervene early with distressed carriers.

Market Impact

1. Carrier insolvencies slowed

The reforms did not immediately reverse insolvencies, but they stopped the acceleration.

2. Reinsurance markets responded cautiously

Reinsurers welcomed the reforms but wanted to see:

3. New carriers and MGAs entered the market

By late 2023–2024, several new entrants appeared, signaling renewed confidence.

4. Citizens growth slowed

Depopulation efforts began to reduce Citizens’ policy count.

5. Rates continued rising — but for different reasons

Litigation pressure eased, but:

…kept upward pressure on premiums.

Why It Matters

The 2022 reforms represent a structural reset of Florida’s homeowners‑insurance system. They:

These reforms are the hinge point between the pre‑2022 litigation‑driven crisis and the post‑2022 rebuilding era.

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