Florida Buyer Due Diligence Guide · 2026
The Florida Homeowners Insurance Survival Guide: What Every Central Florida Buyer Must Ask Before Closing
Insurance issues kill Florida deals every week. Here’s exactly what to inspect, what to ask, what to avoid — and why buying inland in Central Florida is a real advantage the market undervalues.
Let me be completely honest with you about something most agents won’t say until it’s too late: in Florida, home insurance issues can kill a deal after your inspection is done, after your appraisal is in, and after you’ve given notice to your landlord. I have watched this happen. It is entirely preventable — if you know what to look for upfront.
Florida’s insurance market has stabilized from its most chaotic period, but it has not returned to “normal” by any pre-2019 standard. Premiums are higher. Underwriting is tighter. Certain roof materials, plumbing types, and property ages will trigger declination letters from carrier after carrier. As your agent, it’s my job to flag these before you fall in love with a property that can’t be insured at a price that works for your budget.
The State of Florida’s Home Insurance Market in 2026 — The Honest Picture
Florida’s insurance market underwent a significant reform period from 2022–2024, with state-level legislation aimed at reducing frivolous litigation and stabilizing the carrier market. Several major insurers who had exited the state have returned. Citizens Property Insurance (the state-backed insurer of last resort) has been depopulating policies back to private carriers. The overall trend is toward stabilization.
But “stabilization” doesn’t mean “cheap.” Here’s what the 2026 market looks like in reality:
| Property Type / Location | Typical Annual Premium Range | Trend |
|---|---|---|
| Inland Central FL (Orlando metro) — Built 2000+ | $2,400 – $4,200/yr | ↔ Stable |
| Inland Central FL — Built 1990–1999 | $3,000 – $5,500/yr | ↑ Moderate |
| Inland Central FL — Built pre-1990 | $3,800 – $7,000/yr | ↑ Significant |
| Coastal FL (within 25 mi of coast) | $6,000 – $18,000+/yr | ↑↑ High |
| South FL (Miami-Dade, Broward) | $8,000 – $25,000+/yr | ↑↑↑ Very High |
This table tells an important story: Central Florida’s inland location is a genuine financial advantage. When I talk to clients coming from South Florida, the insurance savings alone often justify the move to Orlando, before we even get to the difference in home prices.
The Must-Have Inspections That Can Save You Thousands in Premiums
In Florida, there are two inspection reports that no buyer should skip — and that most out-of-state buyers don’t even know exist. If the seller has already had them done, that’s a green flag. If they haven’t, you want them ordered as part of your due diligence, not discovered later.
The 4-Point Inspection
A 4-point inspection evaluates the four major systems of a home that insurance carriers care most about: roof, electrical, plumbing, and HVAC. The goal is to identify any of these systems that are at end-of-life or that represent elevated risk. Insurance carriers typically require a satisfactory 4-point inspection before issuing a policy on any home over 30 years old — and many carriers are requiring them on homes as new as 15–20 years.
Cost: approximately $100–$175. Worth every penny. A 4-point report that reveals a failing electrical panel (Federal Pacific or Zinsco, both known problems) or galvanized steel plumbing can help you negotiate price, request repairs, or walk away before it’s too late.
The Wind Mitigation Report
A wind mitigation inspection examines how a home is constructed and protected against high winds — the primary driver of storm damage in Florida. It looks at roof shape, roof-to-wall connections (clips vs. straps vs. single wraps), roof deck attachment, and the presence of opening protection (hurricane windows, shutters, or impact glass).
A good wind mitigation report can reduce your insurance premium by 20–40%. On a $4,000/year policy, that’s $800–$1,600 in annual savings. The report costs $100–$175 and is valid for 5 years. This is one of the highest-ROI documents in all of Florida real estate.
✓ Central Florida Buyer Insurance Checklist
Check each item before closing. Click to mark completed.
Construction Red Flags That Trigger Insurance Problems in Florida
Not all homes can be insured at reasonable rates — and some can’t be insured through standard carriers at all. Here are the construction factors I watch for on every listing I show a buyer.
Roof Age and Material
This is the single biggest driver of insurance challenges in Florida. Most standard carriers won’t write a new policy on a home with a shingle roof over 15–20 years old. Some are more conservative — 10–12 years. If a roof is aging, sellers may need to replace it before a sale can close, or buyers need to factor in the replacement cost and negotiate accordingly. Metal roofs (standing seam or metal tile) are the gold standard — they typically qualify for 40–50 year coverage lifespans and generate meaningful wind mitigation discounts.
Electrical Panels: The Federal Pacific and Zinsco Problem
Federal Pacific Stab-Lok panels and Zinsco panels are known fire hazards that have been the subject of class action litigation. Most insurance carriers will either refuse to write a policy or demand immediate replacement before binding coverage. These panels were commonly installed in Florida homes built from the 1950s through the 1980s. If you’re buying a home from that era, this is a non-negotiable inspection item.
Plumbing Materials
Galvanized steel pipes are at end-of-life in most older homes. Polybutylene pipes — installed in many Florida homes from the late 1970s through mid-1990s — are also a known problem that many carriers will flag. PVC, CPVC, and copper are all acceptable. If you’re buying a home built before 2000, the plumbing material is a question I’ll help you answer before you get attached.

