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Florida Department of Financial Services
Division of Agent and Agency Services

September 12, 2007

TO ALL AGENTS:

 STAY INFORMED - STAY LEGAL
VERIFY BEFORE YOU SELL!

The Division of Agent & Agency Services is now recommending procedures agents may use when researching whether an insurer is authorized or not. By offering these guidelines, we hope to provide a valuable service to all agents and another useful tool for protecting the public. 

Agents will find that in most cases, the simple procedures outlined below will easily identify those insurers presently authorized to conduct insurance business in Florida. An agent my use a print screen function to capture a printout of the insurer as listed on the website and keep in their file to show they found the authorized insurer.

1.      Make sure you have the complete and correct name of the insurer.  Many insurer names are very similar.

2.      Check our website to determine if the insurer is authorized to conduct insurance business in Florida.

a.      Go to http://www.myfloridacfo.com

b.      Click on “Look up your insurance company”

c.      Enter the insurer’s name

d.      Click on search

e.      Confirm that the insurer as identified in step 1 is listed and authorized to conduct the line of business contemplated.  Depending on the line of business, the following Authorization Types confer authority:

                                        i.             Certificate of Authority

                                      ii.             Information Only

                                    iii.             Letter of Approval

                                    iv.             Letter of Eligibility

                                      v.             Letter of Registration

                                    vi.             License

                                  vii.             Provisional Certificate of Authority

                                viii.             Residual Market

Insurers shown with an Authorization Status as “Active” and Authorization Type as “Permit” have only begun the authorization process, and are NOT authorized to conduct insurance business.

 If the insurer is not listed on the website or the insurer is shown with an Authorization Type not listed above, the agent should not place insurance business with that insurer.  Also, just because an insurer is authorized today does not mean it will necessarily remain authorized in the future. Always check.

 The most common misconceptions regarding licensing requirements involve two lines of business: Health benefit plans claiming ERISA preemption of the Florida Insurance Code and offshore insurers.

1.      If agents are approached to sell employers a group health benefit plan that purports to be ERISA qualified and claims to be exempt from Florida law, agents should beware.  ERISA does not preempt state regulation of a health benefit plan that is sold to multiple employers. This type of plan  is technically called a Multiple Employer Welfare Arrangement (MEWA). Even if it is determined that the MEWA is ERISA qualified, the Florida Insurance Code is not preempted.

2.      A MEWA principally located in another state but operating in Florida must be licensed as a foreign insurer.  A MEWA principally located in Florida and not fully insured by one or more licensed insurers must have its own Certificate of Authority as a Florida MEWA from the Office of Insurance Regulation.  Authorized Florida MEWAs will be listed on our website.  Currently, there is only one authorized Florida MEWA.   Please remember, even if the MEWA claims ERISA preemption, state criminal law is never preempted.

3.      Offshore insurers may claim to be exempt from Florida Law.  They are not.  See Section 624.11 (1), Florida Statutes.

Our website lists authorized insurers involved in insurance business in Florida.  If they are not listed on the website, agents should assume they are not authorized.

Agents who, directly or indirectly, aid or represent an unauthorized insurer could lose their agent’s licenses or face other disciplinary sanctions. Please see F.S. 626.901.

The Department of Financial Services and the Office of Insurance Regulation stand ready to assist in determining insurers authorized to conduct insurance business in Florida.  Our websites are updated expeditiously, as insurers become authorized.