I'll start off with this is meant to educate people as my profession goes widely unknown. I handle property claims in Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana. No, I am not an insurance agent or a carrier adjuster. I'm not even a contractor who claims I can get you a free roof. I'm what's called a public insurance adjuster.

    I have recently been dealing with a literal boat-load of storm claims for people because their insurance companies have failed to pay their claim properly or just flat out denied the claim. A lot of these people have been with their insurance carrier for years and many have never even filed a claim.

    My job is to step in and take over your claim and handle it for you so you can carry on with your life. That means finding temporary housing for your family after a tornado or fire destroys your home or so you can focus on work and not an adjuster trying to lowball you.

    I had a claim for an elderly woman who had a tree cut her house in half. State Farm offered her about $7k. She was a school teacher and did not have time to deal with her insurance adjuster. Nor did she have the knowledge of claims, insurance code, building code, and laws to successfully negotiate with her adjuster. Long story short I stepped in and fought the carrier and she received roughly $270,000. She got a brand new interior for her home. On top of that she received penalty interest from the carrier because they made the claim drag out for nearly a year. That was a year she was out of her house.

    TLDR:

    To nutshell this… When you file a claim on a storm your insurer can't legally raise your rates. They raise them when the storm occurs in anticipation of claims. They raise your rates when risk exposure is higher than usual (more hail or wind storms than usual). When you file a claim you've entered a negotiation. Before hiring an attorney that will take roughly 40% of your claim, hire a public adjuster. We can only take 10%. Most PAs lower their percentage based on claim amounts. We work on a contingency fee basis. We are the guys attorneys typically call when they need help with dispute resolution on claims. We handle the insurance company so you don't have to. They will use anything you say against you similarly to a police officer if you're arrested. I want to know about your past experiences. I also want to know if you have ever heard of a public adjuster. Also, feel free to DM me.

    Thanks!

    This is for Homeowners who have had to deal with insurance companies after storms… TLDR at the bottom
    byu/Supp_Dawg95 inRealEstate



    Posted by Supp_Dawg95

    2 Comments

    1. Tough_Programmer9689 on

      Been through this hell with my roof after a hail storm last year – wish I’d known about public adjusters then because the carrier tried to give me like $3k for obvious damage that ended up costing $15k to fix properly

      Had no clue you guys existed but makes total sense that there’d be someone to fight these companies since they’re clearly not looking out for us

    2. side comment (rant): I filed a claim after a windy storm (north TX) because I lost patches of shingles, maybe around 20.

      Travelers just said, nah. just fix it. estimate is around 3000, so we are done because it’s way lower than the deductible.

      frack, fine , I fixed it.

      Framers declined to offer a policy because I had too many claims….SMH

      too many claims was one in 6 years for which nobody but me paid a penny

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