Orlando and Central Florida homeowners lose an average of $18,000-$51,000 when they accept low offers on hurricane, lightning, and wind damage claims. Here's how to fight back.
⚠️ After Orlando hurricanes and storms, insurance companies routinely underpay by $15,000-$50,000 per claim. Document wind damage separately from flood—your policy covers wind but excludes flood.
Orlando sits in Central Florida—inland from the coast but still exposed to hurricane remnants, tropical storms, and the state's most intense lightning activity. The city is in "Lightning Alley," experiencing more lightning strikes than almost anywhere in North America. Orlando also faces wind-driven rain, occasional tornadoes, and tropical storm flooding. These conditions create specific claim challenges:
The Florida Department of Financial Services regulates carriers. File complaints at myfloridacfo.com or call 1-877-693-5236. Your leverage comes from thorough documentation, contractor estimates, engineering reports when needed, and strategic use of your policy's appraisal clause.
Understanding local risks helps you document claims correctly:
Orlando receives hurricane remnants, tropical storms, and wind-driven rain. Document wind damage (missing shingles, broken windows, structural damage) separately from flood. Obtain NOAA storm track data. Wind-driven rain through openings is often covered under the wind peril.
Central Florida is Lightning Alley. Lightning causes electrical damage, appliance failures, fires, and structural damage. Document all affected systems, get electrician inspections, and obtain repair estimates. Lightning is typically a covered peril.
Orlando experiences frequent severe thunderstorms with damaging winds and occasional tornadoes. Document wind damage, match to storm dates, and photograph structural impact. Wind-driven rain intrusion may be covered.
Florida law and your homeowner policy provide tools to secure fair settlements:
Take comprehensive photos and video within 24-48 hours. Photograph wind damage separately from water damage. For lightning, document electrical damage and affected appliances. Obtain storm data. Keep all correspondence with your insurer.
Obtain at least three detailed estimates from licensed Orlando contractors. For lightning damage, get electrician inspections and estimates. Ensure estimates reflect post-storm Central Florida pricing when applicable.
Compare the insurer's estimate to your contractor estimates. Identify missing scope (electrical systems, appliances, code upgrades), quantity errors, and pricing gaps. Build a detailed discrepancy list.
Send a structured demand letter with your comparison, contractor estimates, photos, storm data, and policy references. Request a response within 15-30 days. Cite Florida DFS expectations and reference appraisal rights.
If the insurer won't negotiate, invoke appraisal if your policy allows. File a complaint with the Florida Department of Financial Services. Most Orlando claims resolve for $18,000-$52,000 more with proper documentation.
Orlando policyholders recover an average of $22,000-$50,000 more with proper documentation and negotiation. Get the tools to build your case.
Start Your Claim ReviewAvoid these errors that cost Central Florida homeowners thousands:
Orlando homeowners who document and negotiate correctly see substantial increases:
Claim Command Pro gives you the same tools public adjusters use—without the 10-20% fee. For a flat $197, you get AI-powered estimate comparison, demand letter templates tailored to Florida law, step-by-step appraisal guidance, and Central Florida pricing benchmarks. Public adjusters charge $5,000-$10,000 on a $50,000 claim. Claim Command Pro costs $197—most Orlando users recover $22,000-$50,000 more than initial offers.
Orlando faces hurricane threats, tropical storms, severe thunderstorms with frequent lightning (Lightning Alley), wind-driven rain, and occasional tornadoes.
Contact the Florida Department of Financial Services online at myfloridacfo.com or call 1-877-693-5236.
Most Florida homeowner policies include an appraisal clause. Each party hires an appraiser; a neutral umpire resolves disputes.
Insurers dispute wind vs. water causation, underestimate lightning damage, and use below-market Central Florida pricing.
Yes. Lightning is typically a covered peril. Document electrical damage, appliance failures, and any fire. Orlando is in Lightning Alley.
Public adjusters charge 10-20% in Florida. Claim Command Pro provides the same tools for a flat $197.