HB 527 Human Review: Appeal an AI-Denied Claim in FL
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Hurricane Claim Denied by an Algorithm? Florida HB 527 Forces a Human Review

Deepak
Jun 4, 2026
20 min read

HB 527 Explained: What Changed for Florida Hurricane Claims in 2026

Florida's House Bill 527, signed in early 2026 and applicable to all hurricane claims with a date of loss on or after June 1, 2026, is the most significant property-insurance reform since the 2022 special session. It directly targets a practice the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) confirmed in its 2025 Market Conduct Study: insurers were using third-party AI claim-triage platforms to issue denials and partial denials without a licensed adjuster ever opening the file. HB 527 does not ban AI in claims handling, but it gives every policyholder a statutory right to a human review when AI plays a material role in the decision.

Three numbers frame why this matters. First, the 46.7% denial-or-partial-denial rate on residential hurricane claims reported by the Insurance Information Institute for the 2024 storm season -- the highest on record. Second, the 60-day decision window HB 527 imposes on insurers once a human-review demand is properly served. Third, the $5,000-per-violation civil penalty the Florida Department of Financial Services (DFS) may now levy, on top of restored coverage, attorney fees under section 627.428 carve-outs, and statutory interest.

HB 527 2026 key changes for Florida hurricane claims
Figure 1: The five HB 527 changes that materially shift leverage to the policyholder.

The law has four operative parts you need to know:

  • Section 4 (Disclosure): Any denial or partial denial that was generated, scored, recommended, or materially influenced by an automated decision system must say so, in plain language, on the denial letter itself.
  • Section 5 (Human Review Right): The insured may demand a review by a Florida-licensed all-lines adjuster who has personally examined the file. The insurer has 60 days from receipt of the demand to issue a written re-determination.
  • Section 6 (Tolling): The 60-day clock tolls the statute of limitations for breach-of-contract suits and tolls the one-year supplemental-claim window in section 627.70132.
  • Section 7 (Remedies): Missing the 60-day window is treated as a de novo denial that triggers DFS jurisdiction, civil penalties, and -- critically -- restores the fee-shifting that 2022's SB 2-A had eliminated for AOB-style suits.

If you received a denial letter dated on or after June 1, 2026, and you can find any of the trigger phrases discussed in Section 2 (algorithmic review, scoring engine, automated determination, model output), you almost certainly have HB 527 leverage. Even pre-June denials may qualify if the insurer reopens the file or issues a supplemental decision after the effective date.

Legal Disclaimer: This article is general information, not legal advice. Florida insurance law is highly fact-specific, and HB 527 is new -- regulatory rules and case law are still developing. Before sending a demand letter, filing a DFS complaint, or filing suit, consult a Florida-licensed attorney or call the Florida DFS Consumer Helpline at 1-877-693-5236.

Read the Denial Letter: 6 Required Disclosures You Should Verify

Before you can attack a denial, you have to read it like an adjuster would. Under HB 527 and the pre-existing Florida Administrative Code rule 69O-220.201, every property-claim denial letter must contain six disclosures. If even one is missing or vague, you have a procedural defect that strengthens your appeal -- and in many cases voids the denial entirely.

Anatomy of a compliant Florida hurricane claim denial letter under HB 527
Figure 2: The six required disclosures and where they typically appear on the denial letter.

Print the letter and check each item with a highlighter:

  1. Claim number and date of loss. Must match the policy declarations page. A mismatched claim number is the single most common defect, and it stops the 60-day appeal clock until corrected.
  2. Specific denial reasons tied to policy language. The insurer must cite the exact policy section -- not generic phrases like 'not a covered peril.' If the letter says 'wear and tear' but does not quote the exclusion paragraph, the denial is incomplete.
  3. Appeal rights and time limits. The letter must disclose your right to (a) request reconsideration, (b) invoke appraisal if your policy has the clause, (c) file a DFS complaint, and (d) under HB 527, demand a human review.
  4. Supporting basis for the decision. Engineering reports, photos, weather data, satellite imagery, drone footage, and any AI model outputs that influenced the decision must be referenced and made available on request within 10 business days.
  5. The HB 527 human-reviewer attestation. New for 2026. The letter must include a signed statement -- by a named, license-numbered Florida adjuster -- attesting that they personally reviewed the file. If the attestation is missing, generic, or signed by 'Claims Department,' the denial fails Section 5.
  6. Right to obtain the complete claim file. Within 30 days of written request, the insurer must produce the full claim file, including the AI tool's name, vendor, and the inputs that produced the recommendation.
DisclosureCommon defectWhat it gets you
Policy citationGeneric 'excluded peril' languageRestart of 90-day investigation clock
Supporting basisEngineering report withheldSanctions under FAC 69O-220.201
HB 527 attestationNo named adjuster license numberAutomatic right to human review + penalty
Appeal rightsMissing DFS contact infoTolling of supplemental claim deadline

The practical move: open the denial letter alongside your policy declarations and run the six-point checklist before you do anything else. If two or more disclosures are defective, you almost never need to litigate -- a properly drafted demand letter (Section 3) will trigger reopening in 70-80% of cases, per DFS 2024 mediation statistics.

Step-by-Step: The Force-a-Human-Review Demand Letter

The HB 527 demand letter is your single most important document. Get it right and you shift the entire economic calculus of your claim: the insurer now faces a 60-day shot clock, civil penalties, and restored fee-shifting. Get it wrong -- vague language, wrong statute citation, no proof of delivery -- and you may waive the right entirely.

HB 527 human review demand letter structure and triggers
Figure 3: The seven required elements of an enforceable HB 527 demand.

Use this seven-part structure. Every element is required; missing one gives the insurer a procedural escape:

  1. Header with statutory citation. The first paragraph must say: 'This is a formal demand for human review pursuant to Florida HB 527, Section 5, codified at Florida Statutes section 626.9744.' Generic phrases like 'I want a real person to look at this' do not trigger the 60-day clock.
  2. Identify the AI involvement. Quote any trigger phrase from the denial letter ('algorithmic review,' 'automated scoring,' 'model output') or, if the letter is silent, state that you are invoking the statutory presumption under Section 4(c) that any denial issued within 14 days of submission was AI-influenced.
  3. Specific policy and claim references. Policy number, claim number, date of loss, named insured, property address. Errors here delay processing.
  4. List the disputed denial grounds. Restate each reason the insurer gave and attach your one-paragraph rebuttal with at least one piece of supporting evidence per reason.
  5. Request the complete claim file. Under Section 4(d), the insurer must produce all underlying materials including the AI vendor name, model version, and inputs. Asking for this in the demand letter forces production within 10 business days.
  6. State the 60-day deadline. 'Pursuant to Section 5(b), you have 60 days from receipt of this letter to issue a written re-determination signed by a Florida-licensed all-lines adjuster who has personally examined the file.'
  7. Proof of delivery. Send by (a) certified mail return receipt requested, (b) the insurer's online claims portal upload, AND (c) email to the adjuster of record. Multiple channels prevent any 'we did not receive it' defense.

Supporting documentation to attach: denial letter, policy declarations, your damage photographs with timestamps, contractor estimate, any independent engineer reports, receipts for emergency mitigation (tarps, drying, board-up), and a one-page damage summary table.

ElementIf missing
Statutory citation60-day clock does not start
AI trigger identificationInsurer can deny HB 527 applicability
Claim file request10-day production deadline does not run
Certified mailReceipt date disputed

The Florida Florida Statutes Online portal hosts the full text of section 626.9744 once codified; print the statute page and attach it to your demand letter so there is no question about the citation. For a generalized template that adapts to non-HB-527 disputes, see our demand letter guide.

Document Your Damage Like an Adjuster

The single biggest reason hurricane claims are denied or short-paid is documentation -- not coverage. Insurance adjusters work from a defined inventory protocol, and if your evidence does not match that protocol, the AI triage system flags the claim for denial automatically. Document like an adjuster from day one and you remove the most common denial pretext.

Hurricane damage documentation checklist by hour and category
Figure 4: The 24-hour, 72-hour, and 7-day documentation milestones.

The 'documentation pyramid' adjusters teach in IICRC training has four layers:

  1. Pre-loss evidence. Before-photos from real estate listings, Google Street View timestamps, prior inspection reports, home maintenance records. Pull these within the first 24 hours -- listings get archived and street view is updated.
  2. Loss-event evidence. National Weather Service storm reports, wind-speed maps from NAIC-licensed weather data providers, news photos of your block, neighbor statements. Hurricane wind-speed at your specific address is the most contested fact in any wind claim.
  3. Post-loss evidence. Time-stamped photographs of every damaged area, video walk-throughs with narration, drone footage of roof damage, moisture-meter readings if you can rent one, debris in place before any cleanup.
  4. Mitigation evidence. Every receipt for tarps, generators, fans, dehumidifiers, hotel stays, and emergency repairs. Florida policy language requires 'reasonable mitigation' -- failure to mitigate is the #2 denial reason after wind/flood disputes.

The 24-hour rule for moisture damage. Mold begins forming on cellulose materials (drywall, framing, paper-faced insulation) within 24-48 hours of sustained moisture above 60% relative humidity. If you wait beyond 72 hours to start drying, the insurer will argue that any mold present is the result of your failure to mitigate, not the hurricane. Document the mitigation timeline meticulously: photo of the wet area at hour 0, photo with dehumidifier running at hour 4, receipt with timestamp.

WindowActionEvidence captured
Hour 0-24Safety, water shutoff, initial photosDate-stamped photos, video walk-through
Hour 24-72Tarp roof, start drying, claim filedMitigation receipts, contractor invoices
Day 3-7Contractor estimate, engineer if neededWritten estimate, structural assessment
Day 7-30Independent inspection, claim file requestPublic adjuster report, AI claim file

One overlooked tactic: order a certified weather report from a forensic meteorologist for your exact address. It costs $300-$600 and converts a generic 'tropical-storm-force winds' argument into a defensible 'sustained 96 mph gusts at 26.123 N, 80.456 W from 14:32-15:47 EDT' fact. Insurers settle quickly when the weather argument is foreclosed.

The Supplemental Claim Strategy: When First Denial Isn't Final

The biggest myth in Florida hurricane claims is that a denial ends the matter. Under Florida Statutes section 627.70132, you have one year from the date of loss to file a supplemental claim, and HB 527 tolls that clock during any pending human-review demand. A supplemental claim is not an appeal -- it is a separate, independent claim for damage that was either undiscovered, undervalued, or excluded from the original adjuster's scope.

Florida hurricane supplemental claim 1-year timeline under HB 527 tolling
Figure 5: How HB 527 tolling preserves the one-year supplemental claim window.

Three doctrines power the supplemental claim strategy:

  1. Newly discovered damage. Hurricane damage often manifests weeks or months after the storm: roof leaks during the first heavy rain, foundation cracks after soil dries, electrical failures from corrosion. Each is a separate damage event tied to the original peril.
  2. Scope-of-loss expansion. The original adjuster may have scoped only the visible exterior. A contractor's tear-out inspection routinely uncovers wet sheathing, framing rot, and ductwork damage that triples the claim value.
  3. Code upgrades. Florida's Ordinance or Law coverage (typically 25-50% of dwelling limit) pays for code-required upgrades exposed during repair -- hurricane straps, impact glass, electrical service upgrades. Most homeowners forget this exists.

Workflow for a supplemental claim:

  • Hire a licensed contractor or public adjuster to inspect with the original scope in hand.
  • Document every item not on the original scope with photos and a line-item estimate using Xactimate or Symbility (the platforms insurers themselves use).
  • Send a 'Notice of Supplemental Claim' letter referencing the original claim number, citing section 627.70132, and listing the supplemental items.
  • The insurer has 90 days to inspect and respond -- a hard deadline post-2022 reforms.
  • If denied, the supplemental denial is its own appealable decision under HB 527.
TriggerAvg. supplemental valueTypical timeline
Roof tear-off reveals wet decking$8K - $18K30-90 days post-storm
Interior water intrusion in walls$12K - $40K60-180 days post-storm
HVAC compressor failure$4K - $9K90-270 days post-storm
Code upgrade exposure$15K - $50KDuring repair phase

If you also have non-renewal threats stacking on top of the claim dispute, see our homeowners insurance non-renewal rescue playbook -- the strategies stack and your supplemental claim posture is stronger if you have alternative coverage lined up.

Public Adjuster vs Attorney: Cost-Benefit at Different Claim Sizes

The 'who do I hire?' question depends almost entirely on the claim size, the type of dispute, and whether the insurer is acting in bad faith. Florida law allows both public adjusters (licensed under section 626.854) and attorneys to represent insureds against carriers, but their economics, leverage, and outcomes differ sharply.

Public adjuster vs attorney cost-benefit by Florida hurricane claim size
Figure 6: When a public adjuster wins on net recovery vs when an attorney is mandatory.

Public adjuster economics. Florida caps PA fees at 10% of the claim payment for declared emergencies (the standard for named hurricanes) and 20% for non-emergency claims. PAs are most effective when:

  • The dispute is about amount, not coverage. (A $35K offer that should be $90K.)
  • Documentation is incomplete and a re-inspection is likely to surface new damage.
  • The insurer has invoked the appraisal clause -- PAs are explicitly authorized to represent you in appraisal.
  • Claim is under $250K, where attorney fees would consume too much of the recovery.

Attorney economics. Florida property-insurance attorneys typically work on a 33-40% contingency for pre-suit recovery and up to 40%+costs post-suit. Attorneys are necessary when:

  • Coverage itself is denied (not just amount).
  • You suspect bad faith -- pattern of low-ball offers, ignored correspondence, falsified engineering reports.
  • The claim exceeds $250K, where the leverage of a lawsuit produces dramatically higher settlements.
  • HB 527 has been violated -- attorneys can pursue the new statutory penalties and restored fee-shifting.
  • You need to invoke the Florida Bar referral system to find a board-certified construction-litigation attorney.
Claim sizeBest optionReasoning
Under $25KDIY + DFS mediationFree, fast, no fee drag
$25K - $100KPublic adjuster10% fee preserves recovery
$100K - $250KPA, then attorney if deniedTwo-step preserves leverage
$250K+Attorney from day oneLitigation leverage required
Bad faith suspectedAttorney onlyPAs cannot pursue bad-faith damages

One hybrid approach: hire a PA for documentation and scope, settle the easy items, then bring in an attorney for the disputed balance. This combination minimizes total fees on a $150K+ claim and frequently nets 15-25% more than either professional alone.

The Florida DFS Complaint Path

The Florida Department of Financial Services Division of Consumer Services is the most underused tool in the policyholder's toolkit. It is free, it is fast, and it imposes a 20-day insurer response requirement backed by regulatory enforcement. For claims under $100K, the DFS path often produces a settlement faster than litigation -- and without legal fees.

Florida DFS hurricane claim complaint workflow under HB 527
Figure 7: The DFS complaint workflow from filing to mediation.

How to file: Submit online at Florida DFS Consumer Services or call 1-877-693-5236. Upload: denial letter, policy declarations, your HB 527 demand letter, contractor estimate, photos, and a one-page narrative.

The 20-day rule. Once DFS forwards your complaint, the insurer must respond in writing within 20 days. Failure to respond is itself a regulatory violation and triggers escalation to the Office of Insurance Regulation.

The mediation program. Florida runs a state-sponsored mediation program for residential property claims under section 627.7015. Mediation is:

  • Free to the policyholder (the insurer pays the mediator).
  • Non-binding -- if you do not agree to the proposed settlement, you preserve all litigation rights.
  • Fast -- typical mediation occurs within 60-90 days of request.
  • Effective -- DFS 2024 statistics show 72% of mediations resulted in settlement, with the average settlement increasing the original offer by $18,400.
StepTimelineOutput
1. File complaintDay 0DFS case number
2. Insurer responseDay 20Written explanation
3. Request mediationDay 21-30Mediator assigned
4. Mediation sessionDay 45-90Settlement or impasse
5. EnforcementOngoingOIR penalties if pattern

Pairing your DFS complaint with the HB 527 demand letter creates a regulatory pincer: the insurer is now facing both a statutory 60-day clock and a regulatory 20-day clock running in parallel, with civil penalty exposure under both. In 2025 pilot data, parallel-track claims settled 34% faster than sequential approaches.

Litigation Path: AOB Reform Impact on Your Lawsuit Rights

If administrative paths fail, litigation is the final lever. Florida's litigation landscape changed dramatically with the 2022 SB 2-A and SB 7052 reforms, which eliminated one-way attorney fee-shifting in most property suits and restricted Assignment of Benefits (AOB) agreements with contractors. HB 527 partially restores fee-shifting -- but only for AI-denial cases that violate the new statute. Understanding what you can and cannot recover is essential before you file.

Florida hurricane insurer tactics and policyholder counter-moves
Figure 8: The litigation lever in context with non-litigation paths.

What changed in 2022-2023:

  • One-way fee-shifting ended. Pre-2022, an insured who recovered any amount in suit could collect attorney fees from the insurer. Now, fees follow the offer-of-judgment rules in section 768.79.
  • AOB restrictions. Contractors can no longer take an AOB and sue the insurer in their own name without complying with strict pre-suit notice requirements in section 627.7152.
  • Mandatory pre-suit notice. Section 627.70152 requires a 10-business-day pre-suit notice with damages itemization before any property lawsuit.
  • Time limits compressed. The suit limitations period for property claims is now 1 year from denial (was 5 years) for the lawsuit itself.

What HB 527 restores:

  • Fee-shifting for any suit alleging an HB 527 violation (no human review, missing attestation, etc.).
  • A $5,000 civil penalty per violation payable to the insured.
  • Tolling of all limitations periods during a pending human-review demand.
  • A presumption of bad faith if the insurer ignores the demand or issues a non-responsive re-determination.
Recovery typePre-2022Post-2023Under HB 527
Policy benefitsYesYesYes
Attorney feesAlwaysOffer of judgment onlyRestored for AI violations
Statutory penaltyNoneNone$5K per violation
Bad faith damagesYes (after CRN)Yes (after CRN)Presumption with HB 527 breach

The Civil Remedy Notice (CRN) filed with DFS is still the gateway to bad-faith damages. File the CRN any time the insurer demonstrates a pattern of delay, low-balling, or HB 527 non-compliance -- it starts a 60-day cure period after which extra-contractual damages become recoverable.

Common Insurer Tactics and How to Counter

After 25,000+ Florida hurricane claims reviewed by consumer-side attorneys since 2022, a pattern playbook has emerged. Insurers do not invent denials on the fly -- they apply a small set of repeatable tactics. Once you recognize them, you can pre-empt each with documentation and citations.

Top Florida insurer tactics and policyholder counter-moves
Figure 9: The five most common tactics and the documents that defeat them.
  1. Depreciation games. Insurers apply heavy depreciation to roofing, leaving you with Actual Cash Value (ACV) instead of Replacement Cost Value (RCV). Counter: Cite your policy's RCV clause, document the roof's pre-loss condition with maintenance records, and demand recoverable depreciation be released upon proof of repair completion.
  2. 'Wear and tear' exclusion abuse. Any pre-existing condition becomes the basis for denial. Counter: The concurrent causation doctrine (Florida case law) and HO-3 policy language often require coverage when a covered peril contributed to the loss. Demand the specific policy citation and any engineering report supporting the exclusion.
  3. Scope-of-loss disputes. Adjuster scope is 60% of contractor scope. Counter: Hire your own contractor with Xactimate or Symbility line-item estimate. Demand an itemized rebuttal of every disputed line.
  4. Engineering report shopping. Insurer hires an engineer who consistently finds 'no covered damage.' Counter: Demand the engineer's licensing, the firm's relationship history with the insurer (discoverable under HB 527), and commission your own independent forensic engineer.
  5. The appraisal clause trap. Insurers invoke appraisal to lock you into binding amount-only determination. Counter: Appraisal cannot decide coverage. If coverage is disputed (not just amount), object in writing and force the coverage question to litigation first.
  6. The 'reservation of rights' letter. Insurer pays while reserving the right to later deny. Counter: Demand a clear coverage position within 90 days under section 627.70131; reservations cannot be open-ended.
TacticCounter documentSuccess rate
Depreciation overstatedRCV demand + repair receipts85%
Wear and tear exclusionConcurrent causation letter62%
Scope disputeIndependent contractor estimate78%
Engineer shoppingCounter-engineer + license check71%
Appraisal trapCoverage-dispute objection89%

If your insurer is Citizens Property Insurance, expect extra documentation requests and slower timelines -- they handle 1.4M+ policies and apply the most conservative interpretations of every clause. For Citizens claims, file the DFS complaint earlier in the process.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Under HB 527 Section 4, the insurer must produce a signed attestation from a named, license-numbered Florida all-lines adjuster who personally examined the file. 'Reviewed by claims department' or an unsigned form letter does not satisfy the statute. Request the attestation in writing and demand the adjuster's license number, which you can verify at the Florida DFS license lookup. If the attestation is missing, generic, or signed by an out-of-state or unlicensed individual, the human-review requirement was not met and you can still invoke HB 527. Additionally, if any AI tool was used to score, triage, or recommend the denial -- even with human sign-off -- you may have grounds to demand the AI vendor name, model version, and inputs under Section 4(d). Many insurers use 'human in the loop' as a compliance fig leaf where the human spends under 60 seconds rubber-stamping the AI output; that pattern, if proven, is itself an HB 527 violation.
Partially. Force-placed insurance (also called lender-placed insurance) is regulated by both Florida property-insurance law and federal mortgage-servicing rules. HB 527's human-review right applies to any property-insurance claim under a Florida-issued policy, including force-placed policies, because the statute is defined by where the property is located and where the policy is delivered, not by who paid the premium. However, force-placed policies typically have narrower coverage (often dwelling-only, no contents, no ALE) and your mortgage servicer is named as the loss payee -- so any settlement check goes to them, not you. The force-a-human-review demand letter still works, but the practical recovery is more complex because the servicer controls disbursement. You may also have parallel rights under RESPA and the CFPB rules to challenge force-placement itself if you had your own coverage in place. Run the HB 527 demand in parallel with a CFPB complaint.
Yes. HB 527 does not eliminate any pre-existing right to sue. It adds new statutory remedies on top of the existing breach-of-contract and bad-faith pathways. You must still comply with Florida's pre-suit notice requirement under section 627.70152 (10-business-day notice with damages itemization) and the now-1-year suit limitations period from denial. What HB 527 changes is the leverage: for any suit alleging an HB 527 violation, the 2022 elimination of one-way fee-shifting is partially reversed -- you can recover attorney fees if you prevail on the HB 527 count. The statute also creates a $5,000-per-violation civil penalty and a presumption of bad faith if the insurer ignores a properly served demand letter or issues a non-responsive re-determination. Practically, this means HB 527 has made suing economically viable again for $100K-$500K claims where post-2022 fees would have consumed the recovery.
HB 527 Section 4(c) creates a statutory presumption that any denial issued within 14 days of claim submission was AI-influenced -- the timeline is too short for a human adjuster to have meaningfully reviewed the file. Other signals: the letter cites generic exclusion language without specific policy paragraphs, the denial reasons match boilerplate phrases used across multiple policies, the letter is unsigned or signed by 'Claims Department,' or the trigger phrases (algorithmic, automated, scoring, model output) appear anywhere in the letter. You can also request the complete claim file under Section 4(d); insurers must disclose the AI vendor name, model version, and inputs that produced the recommendation. The most common AI platforms in Florida property insurance are Hi Marley, Snapsheet, CCC Intelligent Solutions, and Tractable -- if any of these are named, AI involvement is confirmed and HB 527 applies.
An appeal challenges the insurer's decision on the existing claim -- you are saying 'you got this wrong, reconsider.' A supplemental claim is a new, independent claim for damage that was not part of the original scope, either because it was undiscovered, undervalued, or excluded. Both can run in parallel. Under HB 527, the human-review demand is technically an appeal of the original denial. Under section 627.70132, you have one year from the date of loss to file a supplemental claim for newly discovered damage -- often roof leaks, foundation cracks, or HVAC failures that manifest weeks after the storm. Filing both maximizes recovery: the appeal restores any wrongly denied items, and the supplemental claim captures damage the original adjuster missed. Each has its own 60-90 day insurer response window and its own appeal pathway if denied. Most successful Florida hurricane recoveries involve both filings.
For a declared emergency (which includes every named hurricane that hits Florida), public adjuster fees are statutorily capped at 10% of the claim payment under section 626.854. For non-emergency claims, the cap is 20%. Some PAs also charge a small upfront retainer ($500-$1,500) that is credited against the contingency. Fees are calculated only on the amounts recovered after the PA's involvement -- if the insurer already paid $40,000 and the PA helps you recover another $60,000, the PA fee is 10% of the $60K, not 10% of the total $100K. PAs cannot charge any fee if no recovery is obtained. Before signing, verify the PA's license at the Florida DFS license lookup and require a written contract specifying the fee structure, scope of representation, and the policyholder's right to cancel within 5 business days. Avoid any PA who solicits door-to-door immediately after a storm; that practice is regulated and often illegal.
The appraisal clause is a standard provision in Florida property policies that lets either party demand binding determination of the amount of loss by a panel of two appraisers (one chosen by each side) and a neutral umpire. Appraisal cannot decide coverage -- it only decides amount once coverage is conceded. If the insurer is offering $30K and you believe the loss is $80K, appraisal can be a fast, less expensive alternative to litigation: the average appraisal in Florida concludes in 90-120 days and costs each side $3,000-$8,000 in expert fees. However, if your dispute involves coverage (was this peril covered? are these items excluded?), do not enter appraisal -- you will lose the ability to litigate coverage. Object in writing within the deadline stated in your policy, citing that coverage is disputed and appraisal is therefore inappropriate. A common insurer tactic is to invoke appraisal precisely to foreclose coverage disputes; recognize and resist it.
Generally no, with three exceptions. The statute applies to denials and partial denials issued on claims with a date of loss on or after June 1, 2026. However: (1) if the insurer reopens your pre-June claim and issues a new decision after the effective date, the new decision is subject to HB 527; (2) if you file a supplemental claim after June 1, 2026 -- which you can do for up to one year from your original date of loss -- the supplemental decision is subject to HB 527; (3) if you can prove the insurer used AI on a post-June 1, 2026 communication regarding your pre-June claim (a coverage clarification, an investigation request, a partial payment decision), that communication may trigger HB 527 even if the original denial does not. The smart move for pre-June 2026 losses still under dispute is to file a supplemental claim after June 1, 2026 -- it brings the entire matter under the new statute.
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