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SB0030 • 2026

Rate Filings for Property Insurers

Rate Filings for Property Insurers

Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Sharief
Last action
2026-03-13
Official status
Senate - Died in Banking and Insurance
Effective date
2026-07-01

Plain English Breakdown

The bill summary does not provide specific details on how insurers will respond, leaving this point uncertain.

Rate Filings for Property Insurers

This bill revises the powers of the consumer advocate and sets limits on how much property insurance rates can increase.

What This Bill Does

  • Adds new powers to the consumer advocate, including requesting administrative hearings and issuing subpoenas for evidence.
  • Limits the Office of Insurance Regulation from approving rate filings that are more than 10 percent above the highest approved rate in the past year.
  • Requires insurers or the consumer advocate to get a hearing within 30 days and a final order within 60 days after the hearing.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Property insurance companies in Florida
  • The Office of Insurance Regulation
  • Policyholders who pay property insurance premiums

Terms To Know

Consumer Advocate
A person appointed by the Chief Financial Officer to represent the public's interests before the department and office.
Rate Filing
The process of submitting proposed insurance rates for approval or review.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill only applies to property insurance, not other types like workers' compensation or motor vehicle insurance.
  • It is unclear how insurers will respond to the new rate filing limits and expedited hearing requirements.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-13 Senate

    • Died in Banking and Insurance

  2. 2026-01-13 Senate

    • Introduced

  3. 2025-10-06 Senate

    • Referred to Banking and Insurance; Appropriations Committee on Agriculture, Environment, and General Government; Fiscal Policy

  4. 2025-09-08 Senate

    • Filed

Official Summary Text

Rate Filings for Property Insurers; Revising the powers of the consumer advocate; specifying that failure to obey certain court orders may be punished as contempt; authorizing a circuit court to order a person to pay certain expenses; prohibiting the Office of Insurance Regulation from approving certain rate filings, etc.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Florida Senate
-
2026

SB 30

By
Senator Sharief

35-00049-26 202630__
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to rate filings for property insurers;
3 amending s. 627.0613, F.S.; revising the powers of the
4 consumer advocate; specifying that failure to obey
5 certain court orders may be punished as contempt;
6 authorizing a circuit court to order a person to pay
7 certain expenses; amending s. 627.062, F.S.;
8 prohibiting the Office of Insurance Regulation from
9 approving certain rate filings; authorizing the
10 consumer advocate to request a specified
11 administrative hearing and an expedited appellate
12 review; providing an effective date.
13
14 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
15
16 Section 1. Subsections (5) and (6) are added to section
17 627.0613, Florida Statutes, to read:
18 627.0613 Consumer advocate.—The Chief Financial Officer
19 must appoint a consumer advocate who must represent the general
20 public of the state before the department and the office. The
21 consumer advocate must report directly to the Chief Financial
22 Officer, but is not otherwise under the authority of the
23 department or of any employee of the department. The consumer
24 advocate has such powers as are necessary to carry out the
25 duties of the office of consumer advocate, including, but not
26 limited to, the powers to:
27
(5) Request an administrative hearing pursuant to s. 120.57

28
to challenge a notice of intent to approve or a notice of intent

29
to disapprove a rate filing.

30
(6)

Administer oaths or affirmations to compel the

31
attendance and testimony of witnesses
,
or to issue subpoenas for

32
and compel the production of books, papers, records, documents,

33
and other evidence
,
pertaining to any investigation or hearing

34
convened under this section.

35
(a)

In conducting an investigation, the consumer advocate

36
and its investigators
must
have access at all reasonable times

37
to premises, records, documents, and other evidence or possible

38
sources of evidence and may examine, record, and copy such

39
materials and take and record the testimony or statements of

40
such persons as
deemed
reasonably necessary for the furtherance

41
of the investigation.

42
(b)

In the case of a refusal to obey a subpoena issued to

43
any person, the consumer advocate may make application to any

44
circuit court of this state, which
court
shall have jurisdiction

45
to order the witness to appear before the consumer advocate to

46
give testimony and to produce evidence concerning the matter in

47
question. Failure to obey the court’s order may be punished by

48
the court as contempt. If the court enters an order holding a

49
person in contempt or compelling the person to comply with the

50
subpoena, the court
may
order the person to pay the consumer

51
advocate reasonable expenses, including reasonable attorney

52
fees, accrued by the consumer advocate in obtaining the order

53
from the court.

54 Section 2. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) and subsection
55 (6) of section 627.062, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
56 627.062 Rate standards.—
57 (2) As to all such classes of insurance:
58 (a) Insurers or rating organizations shall establish and
59 use rates, rating schedules, or rating manuals that allow the
60 insurer a reasonable rate of return on the classes of insurance
61 written in this state. A copy of rates, rating schedules, rating
62 manuals, premium credits or discount schedules, and surcharge
63 schedules, and changes thereto, must be filed with the office
64 under one of the following procedures:
65 1. If the filing is made at least 90 days before the
66 proposed effective date and is not implemented during the
67 office’s review of the filing and any proceeding and judicial
68 review, such filing is considered a “file and use” filing. In
69 such case, the office shall finalize its review by issuance of a
70 notice of intent to approve or a notice of intent to disapprove
71 within 90 days after receipt of the filing. If the 90-day period
72 ends on a weekend or a holiday under s. 110.117(1)(a)-(i), it
73 must be extended until the conclusion of the next business day.
74 The notice of intent to approve and the notice of intent to
75 disapprove constitute agency action for purposes of the
76 Administrative Procedure Act. Requests for supporting
77 information, requests for mathematical or mechanical
78 corrections, or notification to the insurer by the office of its
79 preliminary findings does not toll the 90-day period during any
80 such proceedings and subsequent judicial review. The rate shall
81 be deemed approved if the office does not issue a notice of
82 intent to approve or a notice of intent to disapprove within 90
83 days after receipt of the filing.
84 2. If the filing is not made in accordance with
85 subparagraph 1., such filing must be made as soon as
86 practicable, but within 30 days after the effective date, and is
87 considered a “use and file” filing. An insurer making a “use and
88 file” filing is potentially subject to an order by the office to
89 return to policyholders those portions of rates found to be
90 excessive, as provided in paragraph (h).
91 3. For all property insurance filings made or submitted
92 after January 25, 2007, but before May 1, 2012, an insurer
93 seeking a rate that is greater than the rate most recently
94 approved by the office shall make a “file and use” filing. For
95 purposes of this subparagraph, motor vehicle collision and
96 comprehensive coverages are not considered property coverages.
97
4.

The office may not approve any property insurance filing

98
made or submitted on or after July 1, 2026, if the proposed rate

99
is more than 10 percent above the highest rate approved by the

100
office within the past 12 months. If multiple rate filings occur

101
within a 12-month period, the office may not approve a total

102
cumulative increase that is more than 15 percent above the

103
highest approved rate within the past 12 months.

104
105 The provisions of this subsection do not apply to workers’
106 compensation, employer’s liability insurance, and motor vehicle
107 insurance.
108 (6)(a) If an insurer
or the consumer advocate under s.

109
627.0613
requests an administrative hearing pursuant to s.
110 120.57 related to a rate filing under this section, the director
111 of the Division of Administrative Hearings
must

shall
expedite
112 the hearing and assign an administrative law judge who shall
113 commence the hearing within 30 days after the receipt of the
114 formal request and enter a recommended order within 30 days
115 after the hearing or within 30 days after receipt of the hearing
116 transcript by the administrative law judge, whichever is later.
117 Each party shall have 10 days in which to submit written
118 exceptions to the recommended order. The office shall enter a
119 final order within 30 days after the entry of the recommended
120 order. The provisions of this paragraph may be waived upon
121 stipulation of all parties.
122 (b) Upon entry of a final order, the insurer
or the

123
consumer advocate under s. 627.0613
may request an expedited
124 appellate review pursuant to the Florida Rules of Appellate
125 Procedure. It is the intent of the Legislature that the First
126 District Court of Appeal grant an insurer’s
or a consumer

127
advocate’s
request for an expedited appellate review.
128 Section 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2026.