Your Hurricane Damage Claim Was Underpaid. Here’s How to Recover What’s Missing.

Property insurance claims should cover the full cost of restoring your home — but many fall short.

UNDERPAID HURRICANE CLAIM — FLORIDA PROPERTY LAW

Your Hurricane Damage Claim Was Underpaid. Here’s How to Recover What’s Missing.

You made it through the storm — but the insurance payout doesn’t come close to covering the damage. That gap isn’t accidental. Florida Advocates reviews underpaid hurricane claims and shows exactly where insurers reduced your payout.

Page reviewed and approved by Carlos D. Cabrera, Esq., Florida-licensed property damage attorney with 24 years of insurance claim denial experience.

26+ Years Experience

$100M+ Recovered

Former Insurance Defense Attorneys

No Win, No Fee

Free Consultation

How Insurance Companies Reduce Hurricane Payouts After the Storm

After a major hurricane, insurers face thousands of claims at once. The faster they process claims, the more pressure there is to control total payouts. Instead of denying claims outright, many insurers approve them — but significantly reduce the value through estimates that don’t reflect real repair costs.

The most common ways hurricane claims are underpaid in Florida include:

-Undervaluing roof damage using outdated pricing models

-Approving repairs instead of full replacements for storm-compromised structures

-Misclassifying wind damage as wear and tear

-Applying named storm deductibles incorrectly

-Ignoring code upgrade requirements required by Florida building laws

-Using low-cost or insurer-preferred contractor estimates

-Limiting interior damage scope despite visible spread from water intrusion

-Relying on desk adjusters instead of in-person inspections

Many of these tactics mirror disputes like wind vs. water origin disputes and are well understood by attorneys who have worked inside the insurance system. These patterns are not random — they follow predictable cost-control strategies.

01

What Happens After an Underpaid Hurricane Claim — And What You Must Do Next

1. Within 24–48 hours of receiving your payout
Review the insurer’s estimate line by line. Compare it against visible damage and contractor assessments. Most underpayments are obvious once you see what was excluded.

2. Within the first week
Gather evidence: contractor estimates, photos, videos, storm data, and nearby property damage comparisons. Hurricane damage rarely affects one home in isolation.

3. Before 30 days
File a supplemental claim. This formally challenges the insurer’s valuation and forces them to review additional documentation.

4. Before HB 837 deadlines
Florida law limits your window — generally 1 year for new claims and 18 months for supplemental or reopened claims.

5. If you wait too long
You risk losing the ability to recover the remaining value entirely.

Insurers often rely on homeowners accepting low payouts quickly. Once deadlines pass, leverage disappears.

02

How an Underpaid Hurricane Claim Gets Recalculated and Paid Properly

The first step is a full investigation. Florida Advocates gathers NOAA storm data, wind path analysis, and independent engineering reports to rebuild what actually happened to your property. This is critical because insurers often minimize wind impact to justify lower payouts.

Next comes the challenge phase. A supplemental claim is submitted with detailed documentation that corrects the insurer’s estimate. Scope disputes are addressed directly, and when necessary, the appraisal process is used to force a neutral valuation.

If the insurer continues to underpay despite clear evidence, escalation follows. This includes pursuing bad faith claims under Florida Statutes, which can expose insurers to additional financial liability beyond the original claim value.

Hurricane Underpayment Cases Led by an Attorney Who Knows the Insurance Playbook

CARLOS D. CABRERA, ESQ.

Lead Property Damage Attorney

24 Years Experience | Former Insurance Defense Counsel | Million Dollar Advocates Forum | Florida Legal Elite | Bilingual (English/Spanish)

Page reviewed and approved by Carlos D. Cabrera, Esq., Florida-licensed property damage attorney with 24 years of experience.

Carlos D. Cabrera is Florida Advocates’ lead property damage attorney, bringing 24 years of experience and a rare perspective — he spent years defending insurance companies before switching to represent the policyholders they denied. He has recovered millions of dollars for Florida homeowners, condo owners, and businesses whose insurance claims were denied, delayed, or underpaid. Carlos is a member of the prestigious Million Dollar Advocates Forum, has been recognized by Florida Legal Elite, and is fully bilingual in English and Spanish, allowing him to serve Florida’s diverse communities.

Notable Results:

  • $3,000,000 — Condo fire damage recovery
  • $1,000,000 — Waterfront restaurant hurricane claim
  • $750,000 — Restaurant fire (neighboring property fault)

SETTLEMENT RESULTS

What Happens When Underpaid Claims Are Properly Challenged

$ 0

Property Damage

Condo water damage. Insurance initially offered approximately $17,000. We proved the repairs required like-kind-and-quality replacement — not the lower-grade materials the insurer proposed — and resolved the claim for the full amount.
$ 0

Property Damage

Water and mold damage — HOA’s initial offer was $14,000. Our engineer documented the true extent of damage and we secured a settlement more than 7x the original offer.
$ 0

Property Damage

Condo damaged by pool overflow. Initial offer did not reflect the full scope of damage. We demonstrated the COA’s negligence in hiring unqualified contractors and secured full settlement.

FAQ Questions

Underpaid Hurricane Claim Questions — What Florida Homeowners Need to Know

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