Florida Public Adjuster

Licensed Public Adjusters Serving All 67 Florida Counties

✓ No Fee Unless We Recover

✓ Licensed Florida Public Adjusters (#G199012)

✓ Serving The Entire State of Florida

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Florida Public Adjuster - Shoreline Public Adjusters

Your insurance company has a team of adjusters protecting their bottom line. You deserve someone fighting just as hard for yours. Shoreline Public Adjusters represents Florida homeowners, businesses, and HOA associations through every stage of the property damage insurance claim process — from the initial inspection through final settlement.

We work on contingency. No fee unless we recover money for you. Whether your claim was denied outright, delayed for months, or settled for far less than your damage warrants, our licensed adjusters know how to build the documentation and negotiate the payout your policy entitles you to.

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Get Help With Your Florida Insurance Claim

Why Florida Property Owners Need a Public Adjuster More Than Ever

Florida's property insurance market is in crisis — and homeowners are paying the price. Over 1.1 million Floridians are now insured through Citizens Property Insurance, the state's insurer of last resort, after dozens of private carriers either left the market or went insolvent between 2020 and 2025. The carriers that remain have raised rates by 20–40% while tightening coverage, increasing deductibles, and denying claims at higher rates than ever.

For property owners filing claims after hurricanes, tropical storms, water damage, or fire, the odds are stacked against you. Insurance companies deploy their own adjusters — company adjusters — whose job is to minimize the payout. They use formula-driven estimates, overlook hidden damage, and apply policy exclusions aggressively.

A public adjuster changes the equation. Unlike company adjusters who work for your insurer, a public adjuster works exclusively for you. We inspect the damage independently, prepare detailed Xactimate estimates, document every line item the insurance company missed, and negotiate directly with your carrier on your behalf.

Policyholders who use a public adjuster recover an average of 747% more on their claims. On hurricane claims specifically, public adjusters recover 574% more. Even after our contingency fee, you walk away with significantly more money — and none of the stress.

Start Your Florida Claim Consultation

We are extremely proud to serve the following states:

We are based in Naples, FL but are licensed and service the entire state of Florida, Minnesota, and Wisconsin - contact us today to get started!

Florida Insurance Claim Statistics That Prove Professional Help Pays

Independent research confirms what our clients already know — professional representation changes the outcome.

747%
Higher Settlements

Policyholders who hire a public adjuster recover an average of 747% more on their claims. — FAPIA

574%
More on Hurricane Claims

Public adjuster-assisted hurricane claims in Florida recover significantly more than self-filed claims. — OPPAGA

67
Counties Served Statewide

Licensed and serving every county in Florida — from Pensacola to Key West and everywhere in between.

Your Insurance Claim Rights Under Florida Law

Florida statutes protect property owners throughout the claims process. Here's what your insurance company won't volunteer.

Your Insurer Has 60 Days to Pay or Deny §627.70131
Florida law requires insurance companies to pay or deny your claim within 60 days of receiving notice. Miss the deadline, and they may owe you penalties and interest. We track every deadline so nothing slips through the cracks.
Public Adjuster Fees Are Capped by Statute §626.854
FL caps public adjuster fees at 20% for standard claims and 10% during a state of emergency. Shoreline always operates within these limits — and you pay nothing unless we increase your settlement.
Unfair Claim Practices Are Illegal §626.9541
Lowball offers, unreasonable delays, and failure to investigate are violations of Florida's Unfair Insurance Trade Practices Act. If your insurer is dragging their feet, we document every violation to strengthen your position.
You Can File a Civil Remedy Notice for Bad Faith §624.155
When an insurer acts in bad faith, Florida allows policyholders to file a Civil Remedy Notice — a formal step that puts the carrier on a 60-day clock to cure the violation or face litigation exposure. We help identify when this powerful tool applies.

Public Adjuster Services Across Every Region of Florida

Headquartered in Naples, we dispatch adjusters to your location across all 67 Florida counties for thorough on-site inspections.

Panhandle & Northwest

Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa, Walton, Bay & Leon Counties

Directly in the path of Gulf storms — among Florida's highest-risk zones for wind, hail, and storm surge damage.

North & Central Florida

Duval, Orange, Seminole, Hillsborough & Pinellas Counties

The I-4 corridor sees major wind, water, hail, sinkhole, and lightning damage annually across dense metro areas.

Southwest Florida HQ

Collier, Lee, Charlotte, Sarasota & Manatee Counties

Our home territory. Many property owners still navigate open or underpaid Hurricane Ian claims — we know this region and these insurers better than anyone.

Treasure Coast

St. Lucie, Martin, Indian River & Brevard Counties

Prime hurricane corridor with high volumes of wind and water damage claims from storm surge and coastal flooding.

Southeast Florida & Gold Coast

Miami-Dade, Broward & Palm Beach Counties

South Florida's dense condo and high-rise market creates complex claims involving master policies, HO-6 coordination, and multi-party disputes.

Florida Public Adjuster vs. Insurance Attorney vs. Handling It Yourself

After property damage in Florida, you have three options for your insurance claim. Each one serves a different purpose. Knowing when to use each can mean the difference between a fair payout and leaving thousands on the table.

Florida Insurance Attorney

Typically 33–40% contingency fee
  • Handles coverage disputes, bad faith claims, and litigation
  • Files Civil Remedy Notices under FL Statute §624.155
  • Necessary when the insurer refuses to negotiate in good faith
  • Usually gets involved after the claims process stalls
  • Higher contingency fee than a public adjuster
  • Litigation timelines can stretch 1–2+ years

Handle It Yourself

No fee — but statistically the lowest recovery
  • Negotiating alone against trained carrier adjusters
  • No Xactimate estimates or professional loss documentation
  • Easy to miss hidden damage, policy benefits, and FL deadlines
  • FAPIA data shows DIY claimants recover the least
  • One missed deadline under FL's 1-year filing window = forfeited claim
  • No escalation leverage when insurer lowballs your settlement

For most Florida property damage claims, a licensed public adjuster is the right first step. That's true whether you're dealing with hurricane wind damage in the Panhandle, water damage in Tampa, or fire loss in Miami. We get involved early — before costly mistakes are made — and handle the entire process from first inspection to final check.

An insurance attorney becomes the right move when your claim hits a wall. Coverage disputes, bad faith denials, and cases that need to go to court all call for legal help. If your case reaches that point, the work we've already done — Xactimate estimates, moisture readings, photos, and carrier letters — becomes the evidence your attorney needs. We work with Florida insurance attorneys often and can refer you when the time is right.

The numbers speak for themselves. FAPIA data shows that policyholders with professional help recover 747% more on average than those who go it alone. Even after our fee — capped by Florida law at 20% for standard claims and 10% after a declared emergency — you keep far more than you would on your own. Schedule a free claim review to find out which option fits your situation.

Types of Florida Property Damage Claims We Handle

Florida's subtropical climate, hurricane exposure, and aging building stock create property damage risks most states don't face. Each type of claim requires specific documentation strategies and knowledge of how Florida insurers try to minimize payouts.

Most Common

Hurricane Damage Claims in Florida

Florida leads the nation in hurricane landfalls. Every storm brings wind damage, water intrusion, and debris impact that insurers routinely underpay. We separate wind from flood damage, challenge cosmetic-only denials, and pull wind speed data for your exact location. We also document damage that shows up weeks after the storm. Serving homeowners from Pensacola to Miami after every named storm.

Most Disputed

Water & Flood Damage Claims in Florida

Burst pipes, roof leaks, and appliance failures are among the most common — and most disputed — claims in Florida. Insurers often reclassify covered sudden water damage as excluded "gradual leaks." They also cap mold cleanup at low sub-limits. We find the water source, use moisture meters and thermal imaging, and prove the "sudden and accidental" nature of the loss. That's the key phrase that triggers coverage.

Storm

Wind & Tornado Damage Claims in Florida

Beyond hurricanes, Florida sees severe thunderstorms, microbursts, and tornadoes that cause major structural damage. Insurance companies often call wind damage "cosmetic" and offer spot repairs instead of full restoration. We document debris patterns, trace interior water damage back to wind-created openings, and fight percentage-based deductible errors that shrink your payout.

Panhandle

Hail Damage Claims in the Florida Panhandle

The Florida Panhandle sits in Dixie Alley — one of the most hail-active areas in the Southeast. Hail hits roofing, siding, gutters, HVAC units, and soft metals in ways you can't always see from the ground. We run full roof inspections, find functional damage beyond cosmetic marks, and push back when carriers try to limit payouts to surface-level fixes.

Residential

Fire & Smoke Damage Claims in Florida

From kitchen fires to electrical blazes, fire damage goes far beyond what you can see. Smoke gets into HVAC systems, insulation, and hidden spaces throughout the home. We document all smoke and soot damage with industry testing. We also inventory your damaged contents at full replacement cost and make sure your claim includes code upgrades required under the current Florida Building Code.

Florida-Specific

Mold Damage Claims in Florida

Florida's year-round humidity makes mold growth almost certain after any water event. Insurers commonly apply $10,000 mold sub-limits or deny coverage by claiming the mold was there before the loss. We build a clear timeline from the water event to the mold growth. We get independent lab testing and challenge the low payout caps that leave you short.

Commercial

Florida Business Interruption Claims

When property damage forces your Florida business to close or cut operations, lost revenue adds up fast. Insurers routinely undervalue these claims. They dispute the "period of restoration," ignore seasonal revenue swings, and challenge your extra expense records. We work with your financial data to calculate the true economic impact and negotiate for every dollar owed.

Residential

Theft & Vandalism Claims in Florida

Break-ins and vandalism need detailed inventory lists and replacement cost figures that most homeowners can't put together alone. We build full contents inventories, get current replacement pricing, and make sure your claim reflects the true value of what was stolen or destroyed — not the depreciated amount insurers prefer to pay.

Specialty

Cyber Attack & Data Breach Claims in Florida

Ransomware, data breaches, and system hacks trigger insurance claims that most adjusters don't have the technical skills to handle. Our founder holds CISSP and CISA cybersecurity certifications. That means Shoreline can rebuild incident timelines, calculate lost revenue from system downtime, and document data recovery costs with the technical detail these claims demand.

Specialty

Auto Insurance & Diminished Value Claims in Florida

Vehicle damage claims, total loss disputes, and diminished value recovery all need independent valuation. Insurance companies routinely undervalue vehicles. They push aftermarket parts and ignore the drop in resale value that stays even after quality repairs. We get independent appraisals, document the true pre-loss value, and negotiate for the full amount your policy owes.

How Our Florida Insurance Claim Process Works

From initial inspection to final settlement, here's exactly how Shoreline fights for the maximum payout on your Florida property damage claim.

1

Inspect & Document Your Damage

On-site within 24–48 hours anywhere in Florida. We photograph all damage, take moisture readings, review your policy for coverage and exclusions, and identify damage the insurance company is likely to minimize.

2

File & Track Your Florida Claim

We prepare and submit your claim with detailed Xactimate estimates and proof of loss. Under FL Statute §627.70131, your insurer has 14 days to acknowledge and 60 days to pay or deny. We track every statutory deadline.

3

Negotiate & Escalate

We challenge lowball offers, coverage denials, and scope disputes with documentation. If the carrier refuses to settle fairly, we demand appraisal or identify bad faith grounds for a Civil Remedy Notice under §624.155.

4

Maximize Your Settlement

We don't settle for less than your damage warrants. If additional damage appears during repairs, we file supplemental claims. You pay nothing unless we recover — and Florida law caps our fee to protect you.

Unlike other public adjusting firms that hand you off to junior adjusters, Shoreline's licensed Florida public adjusters manage your claim from start to finish. We've handled hurricane claims across Fort Myers and Naples, water damage in Orlando, and commercial losses throughout Jacksonville — and we bring that regional expertise to every claim.

Florida's 2022–2023 insurance reforms shortened the filing window to just one year from the date of loss, with supplemental claims due within 18 months. These deadlines are non-negotiable. If you've experienced property damage, the sooner we get involved, the stronger your claim will be. Request your free Florida claim review today.

Florida Public Adjuster — Frequently Asked Questions

What makes Florida insurance claims different from other states?
Florida has a unique combination of factors that make insurance claims more complex than nearly any other state. The hurricane exposure, subtropical humidity, aging building stock, and a volatile insurance market with carrier insolvencies and rate spikes all create an environment where claims are more frequently disputed. Florida also has specific statutes governing claim timelines — including the 60-day pay-or-deny rule under §627.70131 — public adjuster fee caps under §626.854, and bad faith remedies under §624.155 that don't exist in most states. Understanding these Florida-specific rules is critical to getting a fair settlement.
How does the 60-day claim deadline work in Florida?
Under Florida Statute §627.70131, once your insurer receives notice, they must acknowledge within 14 days and pay or deny within 60 days. If they miss the deadline, interest accrues on the unpaid amount. A public adjuster ensures all documentation is submitted promptly and tracks every deadline.
What are the fee caps for public adjusters in Florida?
Florida Statute §626.854 sets clear limits on what a public adjuster can charge. For claims filed during a Governor-declared state of emergency — such as after a hurricane — the maximum fee is 10% of the recovery for the first year after the declaration. For all non-emergency claims, the maximum is 20%. These are contingency fees, meaning you pay nothing upfront and nothing at all if we don't recover money for you. The fee is calculated on the settlement amount recovered after the public adjuster contract is signed. Shoreline always operates within these statutory limits.
Can my insurance company prevent me from hiring a public adjuster?
No. Florida law gives you the explicit right to hire a licensed public adjuster. Your insurer cannot refuse to communicate with your adjuster, penalize you, or delay your claim because you chose professional representation. If a carrier rep discourages hiring a PA, that may constitute an unfair claims practice.
What should I do if my Florida insurance claim is denied?
A denial is not necessarily the final answer. Start by reviewing the denial letter to understand the specific reason cited — common reasons include policy exclusions, late filing, insufficient documentation, or causation disputes. A public adjuster can re-inspect the damage, gather additional evidence such as engineering reports or independent testing, and file a formal appeal or supplemental claim. If the denial appears to be in bad faith, the next steps may include demanding appraisal under your policy, requesting DFS mediation through the Florida Department of Financial Services, or filing a Civil Remedy Notice under §624.155 to open the door for a bad faith lawsuit.
What's the difference between a public adjuster and an insurance attorney?
A public adjuster handles the claims process — inspecting, documenting, filing, and negotiating. We get involved early, before mistakes are made. An attorney handles legal disputes — coverage denials requiring litigation and bad faith claims. In many cases, a PA resolves the claim without needing an attorney. When legal action is needed, our documentation becomes critical evidence.
How does the appraisal process work in Florida?
Most FL policies include an appraisal clause for disputes over dollar amounts (not coverage). Each side selects an appraiser within 20 days, and the two appraisers select a neutral umpire. If any two of three agree on a value, it's binding. Each party pays their own appraiser; umpire costs are split. Often faster and cheaper than litigation.
What is a Civil Remedy Notice?
A CRN is a formal filing under FL Statute §624.155 required before suing your insurer for bad faith. It gives the carrier 60 days to cure the violation before facing a lawsuit for damages beyond policy limits. Common triggers include unreasonable delays, failure to investigate, and settling far below what the evidence supports.
Does Shoreline handle HOA and condo association claims?
Yes — HOA and condo claims are a core specialization. Florida has more condo units than any other state, and these claims involve master policies, HO-6 policies, and the Florida Condominium Act (Chapter 718). We understand all three master policy types (Bare Walls-In, Single Entity, All-In) and represent both associations and individual unit owners.
How long does a typical Florida insurance claim take?
Simple claims can resolve in 30–60 days. Complex claims with multiple damage types or carrier disputes typically take 3–6 months. Claims requiring appraisal or litigation take longer. FL law requires insurers to pay or deny within 60 days, but having a PA from the start accelerates the process through proper documentation and proactive follow-up.
What if my insurance company went insolvent or left Florida?
If your insurer becomes insolvent, the Florida Insurance Guaranty Association (FIGA) steps in to handle claims, though with caps and slower timelines. If your carrier left the market but is still solvent, your policy should remain in force. Either way, a PA navigates the process and ensures your claim is filed with the correct entity.
Do I need a separate flood policy in Florida?
In most cases, yes. Standard FL homeowner policies don't cover flood damage. Flood coverage requires a separate NFIP or private policy. After hurricanes, insurers often classify wind-driven water damage as "flooding" to deny under your homeowner policy. A PA determines whether damage was wind (homeowner) or rising water (flood) and files under the correct policies.
What's the deadline to file a property insurance claim in Florida?
Following the 2022–2023 reforms, you must file an initial claim within one year of the date of loss. Supplemental claims must be submitted within 18 months. These deadlines are significantly shorter than the previous 3–5 year windows. Missing them means forfeiting your right to recover — contact a PA as soon as possible.

Denied or Underpaid Insurance Claim in Florida? Here's What to Do Next.

A claim denial from your Florida insurance company doesn't mean the fight is over. It often means it's just beginning. Carriers deny Florida property claims for many reasons: policy exclusions read too broadly, late notice technicalities, disputes over wind vs. water damage, or weak documentation. Many of these denials can be overturned with the right evidence and the right advocate.

1

Review Your Florida Claim Denial Letter

We analyze the denial letter, identify the specific reason, and determine whether it's legitimate or challengeable under Florida law.

2

Re-Inspect the Damage & Build New Evidence

We gather new evidence — independent engineering reports, moisture testing, and contractor assessments — that contradicts the insurer's findings.

3

Appeal the Denial or File for Appraisal

Formal appeal, appraisal demand under your policy, DFS mediation, or Civil Remedy Notice under FL §624.155 if bad faith indicators are present.

If the carrier still refuses to pay after our appeal, Florida offers several escalation paths that most homeowners don't know about. If the dispute is over the dollar amount, we can demand formal appraisal under your policy. We can also request mediation through the Florida Department of Financial Services. And if the insurer's behavior crosses into bad faith, we help prepare a Civil Remedy Notice. This gives the carrier 60 days to fix the violation before facing a lawsuit for damages beyond policy limits.

The detailed records we build from day one — Xactimate estimates, photos, moisture readings, and carrier letters — are the evidence that makes appeals, appraisals, and legal action possible. Whether your denied claim is in Fort Myers, Tampa, or Jacksonville, we've overturned denials for property owners across Florida. Request a free review of your denied claim.

Florida HOA & Condo Association Insurance Claims

Florida has more condo units than any other state. HOA and condo insurance claims are among the most complex in the industry. The challenge is the overlap between master insurance policies, individual unit owner HO-6 policies, and the Florida Condominium Act (Chapter 718) — which spells out who's responsible for what.

The type of master policy your Florida condo association carries determines where association coverage ends and unit owner coverage begins:

Bare Walls-In

Association covers the structure down to drywall. Unit owners are responsible for everything inside — flooring, cabinets, fixtures, and personal property.

Single Entity

Association covers the unit as originally built, including standard fixtures and finishes as they existed at initial construction.

All-In

Association covers the unit including any improvements or upgrades the owner has made since original construction.

Knowing which type your association carries is critical. It determines how claims are filed, which policy covers which damage, and who pays the deductible. After a hurricane or major storm, these details are the difference between a properly handled claim and one that falls through the cracks. Too often, unit owners end up paying for damage the association's policy should cover.

Shoreline represents both Florida condo associations and individual unit owners. We review the master policy and HO-6 policy side by side to find coverage gaps. We make sure the claim is split correctly between association and unit owner costs. Then we negotiate full recovery for all damaged areas — common elements, limited common elements, and individual units. Whether your association is in Miami-Dade, Fort Lauderdale, Naples, or Boca Raton, we have the expertise to handle your HOA or condo claim.