Questions California policyholders actually ask
Direct, cited answers to the questions we hear most — from “can I sue my carrier?” to “how long do they have to pay?” Each answer points to the California statute or regulation behind it.
Can I sue my insurance company for bad faith in California?
Yes. California is one of the strongest bad faith states in the country: policyholders can bring both a breach of contract claim and a separate tort claim for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The tort claim can unlock consequential damages, attorney's fees under Brandt, and — where malice, oppression, or fraud is proven — punitive damages under Civil Code §3294.
Read the answerWhat is California Insurance Code §790.03?
California Insurance Code §790.03 is the Unfair Insurance Practices Act. Subsection (h) lists sixteen specific unfair claim settlement practices that insurers are prohibited from committing — including misrepresenting policy terms, failing to acknowledge communications promptly, denying claims without a reasonable investigation, and forcing insureds to litigate by lowballing settlements.
Read the answerHow long does an insurance company have to pay a claim in California?
California's Fair Claims Settlement Practices Regulations (10 CCR §2695) set hard deadlines: insurers must acknowledge a claim within 15 calendar days, complete their investigation and accept or deny within 40 calendar days of receiving proof of claim, and issue payment within 30 calendar days of a settlement agreement. Missing these deadlines without a written explanation is itself a documented compliance failure.
Read the answerWhat counts as bad faith by an insurance company in California?
In California, an insurer commits bad faith when it withholds, delays, or underpays policy benefits without a reasonable basis. The most common patterns are: lowball estimates that ignore code upgrades and matching; denials issued before a real investigation; ignored supplements; misapplied exclusions; and forcing the insured to litigate to recover what the policy already owes.
Read the answerHow do I prove bad faith by my insurance company in California?
California bad faith is proven with the claim file. You need three pieces of evidence: (1) a chronological correspondence log showing every communication with the carrier, (2) a line-item comparison between the carrier's estimate and independent estimates, and (3) a citation map tying each delay, silence, and lowball to a specific §790.03(h) or 10 CCR §2695 violation. Attorneys build the legal theory; the documentary record is what makes the theory provable.
Read the answerWhat is a Legal Document Assistant in California?
A California Legal Document Assistant (LDA) is a non-attorney who is registered and bonded in the county where they work, authorized under Business & Professions Code §6400 et seq. to prepare legal documents for consumers who are representing themselves. An LDA works at the client's specific direction — they don't give legal advice, choose strategy, or represent the client in court.
Read the answerCan a paralegal help me with my insurance claim in California?
In California, a paralegal is only authorized to work under a licensed attorney's supervision — they cannot be hired directly by a consumer. What consumers can hire directly is a registered Legal Document Assistant (LDA), authorized under Business & Professions Code §6400 to prepare legal documents at the client's direction. For an insurance claim, that means organizing evidence, building correspondence logs, and preparing exhibit binders — but not giving legal advice or negotiating with the carrier.
Read the answerWhat should I do if my insurance claim is denied in California?
First, get the denial in writing with the specific policy provision the carrier is relying on — California regulators require this under 10 CCR §2695.7(b)(1), and 'not covered' by itself is a compliance failure. Then request your entire claim file in writing, preserve every document and photo, keep responding only in writing so the record builds itself, and either bring in a licensed California attorney or open an evidence file so the paper is ready when you do.
Read the answerHow much does a bad faith insurance attorney cost in California?
Most California bad faith insurance attorneys take cases on contingency — typically 33% of the recovery if the case settles before filing suit, and 40% after filing. There's usually no upfront legal fee, though costs (filing, experts, deposition transcripts) may be advanced. Evidence file preparation by a California Legal Document Assistant is separate and runs $95/hour, client-directed.
Read the answerWhat is 10 CCR §2695 (California Fair Claims Regulations)?
10 CCR §2695 is the California Fair Claims Settlement Practices Regulations — the binding rules from the California Department of Insurance that spell out how insurers must handle claims. It sets acknowledgement, investigation, and payment deadlines; requires denials to cite specific policy provisions; and requires written status updates every 30 days when investigations extend past the statutory deadlines.
Read the answerWhat are Brandt fees in California?
Brandt fees are the attorney's fees a California insured spent to recover policy benefits the insurer withheld in bad faith. They come from Brandt v. Superior Court (1985) 37 Cal.3d 813 and are recoverable as tort damages — the portion of the fee attributable to obtaining the benefits, not the portion for pursuing the bad faith tort itself.
Read the answerWhat is the genuine dispute doctrine in California insurance law?
The genuine dispute doctrine is a California defense that shields insurers from bad faith liability when their denial or delay rests on a genuine, reasonable dispute — either factual or legal — that was thoroughly and fairly investigated. It does not protect denials built on a biased investigation, ignored evidence, or a legally unreasonable interpretation of the policy (Wilson v. 21st Century Ins. Co. (2007) 42 Cal.4th 713).
Read the answerWhat is the statute of limitations for bad faith insurance in California?
In California, the tort claim for insurance bad faith has a 2-year statute of limitations (CCP §339), and the breach of contract claim has a 4-year limit (CCP §337). But most first-party property policies also contain a contractual 'suit against the insurer' clause requiring suit within 1 year of inception of the loss — that clause is enforceable and is tolled only while the claim is being investigated (Prudential-LMI v. Superior Court (1990) 51 Cal.3d 674).
Read the answerHow do I request my insurance claim file in California?
Send a written request — email or certified letter — to the assigned adjuster and claims manager asking for the complete claim file, including adjuster notes, activity log, all estimates, expert reports, photos, correspondence, and internal reserve/authority documents. California insurers must maintain these records under 10 CCR §2695.3, and while pre-litigation production is voluntary, refusal is itself documentable evidence of unreasonable conduct.
Read the answerCan I sue Bamboo Insurance for bad faith in California?
Yes. Bamboo Insurance is a managing general agent whose California homeowner policies are underwritten by Sutton National Insurance Company, a non-admitted (surplus lines) carrier in California. Both entities are subject to California bad faith law: Insurance Code §790.03, the 10 CCR §2695 Fair Claims Regulations, and the tort of breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
Read the answer