East to read guides from the attorneys who fight insurance companies for homeowners in Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Kentucky.
Hand-selected by our attorneys. Start here if your claim's been denied, delayed, or underpaid.
The deadline matters less than you think. Here's what to file, when, and how to push back if your carrier closed the file too early.
Read guide →A denial isn't a court ruling — it's the insurer's opening position. What you do next changes the math on recovery.
Read guide →The phrase "cosmetic damage" is a tell. Here's what an independent inspection actually finds when a carrier writes it off.
Read guide →Six places where insurance carriers slow-walk, lowball, or deny claims — and where having an attorney changes the math.
From Helene to Ian to seasonal nor'easters, we handle wind, named-storm, and hurricane-deductible disputes.
Carriers love to call hail damage "cosmetic" or blame "old shingles." Independent inspections usually tell a very different story.
Sudden discharges, frozen pipe bursts, supply-line failures, and the mold and structural damage that follows.
Smoke and soot damage is routinely undervalued. We document the full scope so the rebuild matches what your policy promised.
A denial letter is not the end of the road. Most denials we see have legal weaknesses worth challenging.
When the offer doesn't come close to actual repair costs, or the insurer drags its feet, bad-faith law can multiply what's owed.
Filing deadlines, supplemental claim guidance, FEMA coordination, and what to do if your carrier already closed the file too early.
Rate filings, policy language shifts, and case law that affects what your insurance is supposed to cover.
North Carolina Rate Bureau filed for a statewide 68.3% increase. What it actually means for your renewal premium and how to push back.
Carriers are quietly shifting from replacement-cost to actual-cash-value on roof claims. What to look for in your renewal documents.
The Mayfield-area tornadoes hit in December 2021. Delayed and bad-faith files from that event still need resolving — here's what to do if yours is still open.
Tell us what happened. An attorney will review your policy and the carrier's response, and tell you straight whether we think you have a case.
An attorney will review your case and respond within 1 business day. Form will be added next.