Florida Insurance Complaint Guide: File with DFS

Step-by-step guide to filing complaints with Florida Department of Financial Services for hurricane claims, denied claims, and bad faith disputes.

MC
Michael Chen Insurance Claim Documentation Expert

Specialization: Florida hurricane claims and DFS complaint procedures

Last reviewed: February 28, 2026

⚠️ Florida policyholders who file DFS complaints with strong documentation often see settlement increases of $18,000-$55,000 on hurricane and wind claims. Florida's strict bad faith laws create powerful regulatory pressure.

Florida Department of Financial Services (DFS) Contact Information

Online Complaint Form: MyFloridaCFO.com/Division/Consumers

Phone: 1-877-693-5236 (Consumer Helpline)

Mail: Florida Department of Financial Services, Division of Consumer Services, 200 East Gaines Street, Tallahassee, FL 32399-0322

Hours: Monday-Friday, 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM Eastern Time

When to File a DFS Complaint

File a complaint with Florida Department of Financial Services when your insurance company violates Florida law or your policy terms. Common triggers for Florida policyholders:

Florida Bad Faith Law: What Qualifies

Florida has some of the strongest bad faith protections in the nation. Florida Statutes §624.155 and §626.9541 define unfair claim practices. Bad faith in Florida includes:

Florida recognizes both first-party bad faith (your own carrier) and third-party bad faith (liability claims). First-party bad faith requires showing the carrier acted in bad faith and you suffered damages beyond the policy benefits.

Florida Hurricane Claim Protections

Florida law provides additional protections for hurricane and catastrophic storm claims:

If your hurricane claim was denied or underpaid, these protections strengthen your DFS complaint.

Step-by-Step: How to File a DFS Complaint

Step 1: Gather Your Documentation

Before filing, compile a complete documentation package. DFS complaints with strong evidence produce better outcomes.

  • Policy declarations page and relevant policy sections
  • Claim number and date of loss (storm date for hurricane claims)
  • All correspondence with the carrier (emails, letters, adjuster notes)
  • Carrier's estimate and any denial letters
  • Contractor estimates with line-item breakdowns
  • Photos and videos of damage (before and after any repairs)
  • Engineering reports (if wind vs. flood dispute)
  • Timeline of key events (storm date, claim filed, adjuster visit, estimate received, demands sent)
  • Proof of storm damage (weather reports, NOAA data, news coverage)
  • Any demand letters you've sent

Step 2: File Your Complaint Online or by Phone

Online (recommended): Visit MyFloridaCFO.com/Division/Consumers. Complete the online form with:

  • Your contact information
  • Insurance company name and policy number
  • Claim number and date of loss
  • Detailed description of the problem (be specific: what happened, when, what you've tried, why the carrier's position is wrong)
  • Upload supporting documents (estimates, photos, correspondence)

By phone: Call 1-877-693-5236. A DFS representative will help you file and may request documents by email or mail.

By mail: Download the complaint form from DFS's website, complete it, and mail with copies of supporting documents to the address above.

Step 3: DFS Reviews and Contacts the Carrier

After you file:

  1. DFS acknowledges receipt — Usually within 2-5 business days via email or mail
  2. DFS forwards complaint to carrier — Carrier has 20 days to respond in writing
  3. Carrier must provide written explanation — Must address each issue you raised and provide documentation
  4. DFS reviews carrier's response — Determines if carrier violated Florida law or policy terms

Step 4: DFS Investigation and Resolution

DFS may:

  • Require corrective action — If carrier violated law, DFS can order compliance
  • Facilitate settlement discussions — Regulatory pressure often prompts better offers
  • Refer to enforcement — Serious or repeated violations may result in fines or sanctions
  • Close complaint if no violation found — DFS provides explanation

You receive copies of all correspondence. Most complaints resolve within 30-90 days.

Documentation Checklist for DFS Complaints

Essential Documents

  • ☐ Policy declarations page
  • ☐ Relevant policy sections (coverage, conditions, exclusions)
  • ☐ Claim number and date of loss
  • ☐ Carrier's estimate or denial letter
  • ☐ Contractor estimates (at least 2 with line-item breakdowns)
  • ☐ All photos and videos of damage
  • ☐ Engineering report (if causation dispute)
  • ☐ Correspondence timeline (dates and summaries)
  • ☐ Demand letters sent to carrier
  • ☐ Adjuster notes or inspection reports
  • ☐ Proof of storm damage (weather data, news reports)
  • ☐ Proof of timely claim filing

Escalation Timeline: When to Take Each Step

Escalation Pathway

Days 1-30: Negotiate directly with adjuster. Submit formal demand with documentation. Allow 15-30 days for response.

Days 30-45: If no movement, escalate to claims supervisor. Request written explanation of valuation or denial.

Days 45-60: If still no resolution, file DFS complaint. Regulatory pressure often changes carrier's position.

Days 60-90: DFS investigates. Carrier must respond. Many claims settle during this period.

Days 90+: If DFS complaint doesn't resolve, consider appraisal (for valuation disputes) or consult attorney (for coverage or bad faith issues). Florida's bad faith laws make attorney involvement more viable than in many states.

What DFS Can and Cannot Do

DFS can:

DFS cannot:

For payment disputes over amount, consider invoking your policy's appraisal clause. For coverage denials or bad faith, consult a Florida insurance attorney—Florida's bad faith laws allow recovery of attorney fees in many cases.

Build Your DFS Complaint Package

Strong documentation is the foundation of successful DFS complaints. Organize your estimates, correspondence, and evidence before filing.

Start Your Claim Review

After Filing: What to Expect

Once you file a DFS complaint:

Keep copies of all DFS correspondence. If the carrier increases their offer, evaluate it carefully before accepting. You can always negotiate further or pursue appraisal/litigation if needed.

Florida-Specific Claim Requirements

Florida law imposes specific deadlines on carriers:

If the carrier misses these deadlines without reasonable cause, that's grounds for a DFS complaint and may support a bad faith claim.

Assignment of Benefits (AOB) Disputes

Florida's AOB reform laws (2019) changed how contractors and policyholders can use assignment of benefits. If you assigned benefits to a contractor:

If your carrier refuses to honor a valid AOB or delays unreasonably, file a DFS complaint.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I file a complaint with Florida Department of Financial Services?

File online at MyFloridaCFO.com/Division/Consumers or call 1-877-693-5236. You'll need your policy number, claim number, and detailed description of the issue. DFS typically responds within 30-60 days.

What qualifies as bad faith in Florida?

Florida Statutes §624.155 and §626.9541 define bad faith as failure to investigate promptly, denial without reasonable basis, failure to settle when liability is clear, and unreasonable delay. Florida recognizes both first-party and third-party bad faith claims.

How long does DFS take to resolve complaints?

Most DFS complaints receive initial response within 10-15 business days. Full investigation typically takes 30-90 days. Carriers must respond to DFS within 20 days of notification.

Can DFS force my insurance company to pay my hurricane claim?

DFS cannot order a specific settlement amount but can investigate unfair practices and require corrective action. For hurricane claims, Florida's strict timelines and bad faith laws create strong regulatory pressure.

What documentation do I need for a Florida insurance complaint?

Gather: policy documents, claim correspondence, adjuster estimates, contractor bids, photos/videos of damage, timeline of events, proof of storm damage (if hurricane claim), and any demand letters sent.

Will filing a DFS complaint affect my insurance rates?

No. Florida law prohibits carriers from raising rates or canceling policies in retaliation for filing complaints. If you experience retaliation, file an additional complaint.

What happens after I file a DFS complaint?

DFS reviews your complaint, contacts the carrier, and requests a written response. The carrier must respond within 20 days. DFS investigates and may require corrective action. You receive copies of all correspondence.

Can I file a complaint if my hurricane claim was denied?

Yes. If the denial was improper or lacked investigation, DFS can investigate. Include documentation showing storm damage and why the denial violated policy terms. Florida has specific protections for hurricane claims.

Should I hire a lawyer before filing a DFS complaint?

Not required for filing. Most policyholders file themselves. However, for significant hurricane claims, bad faith, or complex coverage issues, consulting a Florida insurance attorney can help.

What is the deadline to file a DFS complaint?

No specific deadline, but file as soon as possible. Florida has a 5-year statute of limitations for breach of contract and 4 years for bad faith claims. Don't delay—regulatory pressure is most effective early.

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