Mackenzie Click-Mickelson
Chugging along the path of life
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2015
- Messages
- 29,689
That pans out to many states. Not necessarily the 3 years part but that after your Discovery period (usually 45-60 days since inception) there's a lot less non-renewals that can be done. That's mostly home as auto there's a lot more leeway on that.Advice #3: Before changing carriers, know your state law. Many states have "Guaranteed Renewal" laws built in. These laws vary. In the state of Louisiana, for example, a Homeowners policy cannot be non-renewed after 3 years in force, except due to VERY specific reasons. You don't want to switch carriers to save 100 bucks, only to find yourself Non Renewed because you make 1 claim in the first 2 years.
I non-renewed quite a bit of autos but almost never did homes because there wasn't as many reasons I could do it for. It was also rare for me to be able to legal notice cancel which meant a cancellation before renewal date. Autos I could do it for things like non-rated exposures, misrepresentation by the insured (often an insured engaged in a business not appropriate for personal lines), insured moved to another state, etc.
Homes would mostly be either claims experience or inspection related (either at new business or random periodic inspections later on). Those were either handled by claims or by Account Underwriting (licensed underwriters) but when I got a call about an insured's policy being non-renewed due to wood rot I was the one who would look over the photos to see if it was rectified and could reinstate the policy at that point.