The moments after an accident are stressful, but the steps you take in the first hour directly affect your coverage outcome. Here's exactly what to do:
Clear guidance for every insurance situation — accidents, claims, hurricane prep, cancellations, and more. Written for Southwest Florida.
The moments after an accident are stressful, but the steps you take in the first hour directly affect your coverage outcome. Here's exactly what to do:
This is one of the most common questions after a minor accident. The answer depends on several factors — and making the wrong choice can cost you more in the long run.
File a claim when: the damage exceeds or is close to your deductible, there are injuries involved (always file), the other party may file against you, or you're unsure of the full extent of damage.
Pay out of pocket when: damage is clearly minor (under $500), you're at fault, the other driver has no injuries, and you want to protect your claims history.
Liability only covers damage you cause to others — their car, their medical bills. It does not cover your own vehicle or injuries.
Full coverage adds collision (your car after an accident) and comprehensive (theft, weather, animals, fire). It costs more but protects your own vehicle.
General rule: if your car is worth less than 3–4x your annual premium for full coverage, liability may be sufficient. If you have a loan or lease, your lender almost certainly requires full coverage.
A roof leak can spiral into a major claim if not handled correctly from the start. Here's the right sequence:
This distinction is critical in Florida — and it determines whether your homeowners policy covers you or not.
Water damage (covered by homeowners): water that originates inside your home — a burst pipe, a leaking appliance, rain entering through a broken window or damaged roof.
Flood damage (NOT covered by homeowners): water that enters from outside — storm surge, overflowing bodies of water, heavy rain accumulation on the ground. This requires a separate flood insurance policy.
Citizens Insurance is Florida's state-backed insurer of last resort. It exists to cover homeowners when private carriers won't insure a property — typically older roofs, high-risk locations, or high-value homes in difficult markets.
Private carriers often offer better coverage terms, faster claims processing, and sometimes lower premiums. They can be more flexible with endorsements and coverage options.
The right choice depends on your property's age, location, roof condition, and market availability. As an independent agent, Bruno evaluates both options for every client and recommends what's genuinely best — not what pays him the most.
Get Both Options Compared →Yes — and in Southwest Florida, the answer is strongly yes. Over 25% of all flood claims come from properties outside designated high-risk flood zones. Hurricanes and tropical storms don't follow flood zone maps.
Properties in Zone X (moderate to low risk) can often get flood insurance for as little as $400–$700 per year — one of the best value protections available in SWFL.
NFIP (National Flood Insurance Program) is the federal program administered through FEMA. Coverage limits: $250,000 for the structure, $100,000 for contents. Rates are regulated and consistent.
Private flood insurance can offer higher limits, broader coverage, faster claims, and sometimes lower premiums — especially for properties with good elevation ratings. Some policies also cover additional living expenses, which NFIP does not.
Bruno evaluates both options for your specific property and flood zone to find the best combination of coverage and price.
Compare Flood Options →Mistakes after filing a claim can reduce your settlement or jeopardize your coverage entirely. Avoid these:
The best time to review your coverage is before a storm is named — not during. Here's a pre-season checklist:
A windstorm deductible is a separate, higher deductible that applies specifically to damage caused by hurricanes and named tropical storms. It is different from your standard deductible.
In Florida, windstorm deductibles are typically expressed as a percentage of your home's insured value — usually 2% or 5%. On a $400,000 home with a 2% deductible, you would pay the first $8,000 of any hurricane-related claim out of pocket.
A cancellation notice is stressful, but you typically have more options than you think — and more time than it feels like. Florida law requires insurers to give advance notice before cancellation takes effect.
Common reasons for cancellation: roof age or condition, claims history, non-payment, insurer leaving the Florida market, or underwriting changes.
Your options: Citizens Insurance (state insurer of last resort), surplus lines carriers, or another private market carrier. As an independent agent, Bruno has access to markets that direct insurers don't.
Your deductible is the amount you pay out of pocket before your insurance kicks in. If you have a $1,000 deductible and file a $6,000 claim, your insurer pays $5,000.
Higher deductible = lower premium. Choosing a $2,500 deductible instead of $1,000 can reduce your annual premium significantly — but you're taking on more financial risk per claim.
A good rule of thumb: your deductible should be an amount you can comfortably access within 30 days if you need to. If a $2,500 deductible would be a financial hardship, keep it lower.
Talk Through My Options →Don't just auto-renew without reviewing. Florida's insurance market changes every year, and the policy that was best for you last year may not be the best option today.
Have your policy number ready before you call. Your carrier is your direct point of contact for claims, roadside assistance, and emergency service — not your agent. This directory is provided as a convenience to help you reach the right resource faster. Always verify contact information with your current policy documents, as numbers and portals may change without notice.
No call centers. No automated responses. Bruno Garcia — licensed Florida agent — will personally answer your question within hours.