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1. General Insurance Concepts
2. Producer Roles and Receipt Types
3. Principles of Life Insurance
4. Underwriting
5. Term Life Insurance
6. Whole Life Insurance
7. Variable Insurance Products
8. Group Life Insurance
9. Life Insurance Provisions
10. Annuities
11. Taxation of Life Insurance Products
12. Qualified Retirement Plans
13. Health Insurance Basics
14. Required Policy Provisions
15. Optional Policy Provisions
16. Medical Expense Insurance
17. Group Health Insurance
18. The Affordable Care Act (ACA)
19. Disability Income Insurance
20. Accidental Death and Dismemberment Insurance
21. Long Term Care Insurance
22. Dental Insurance
23. Section 125 Plans and Limited Policies
24. Federal Government Programs
25. Medigap and Medicaid
26. Health Insurance Taxation
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37. Florida Statutes, Rules, and Regulations
37.1. Florida Insurance Regulatory Framework

Florida Insurance Structure

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This Florida specific chapter is currently being edited.

Common to All Lines of Insurance

Before you study line-specific material like Life, Health, Property, Casualty, or Personal Lines, you need to understand the legal and regulatory system that applies to all insurance activity in Florida.

This chapter gives you that foundation.

Florida’s insurance system is highly organized, but it can feel confusing at first because multiple agencies share responsibility. One agency regulates agents, another regulates insurance companies, and another regulates banks and securities. The exam loves this distinction.

If you can clearly answer questions like:

  • Who licenses agents?
  • Who regulates insurance companies?
  • Who approves rates and policy forms?
  • Who investigates fraud?
  • Who handles insurer solvency?

…then you will avoid a lot of common exam traps.

Why this chapter matters

Many pre-licensing students try to memorize agency names without understanding the structure. That usually backfires.

Instead, focus on this idea:

Florida separates the regulation of people who sell insurance from the regulation of companies that issue insurance.

That one concept unlocks most of this chapter.

Florida’s Insurance Regulatory Structure

Florida divides financial and insurance regulation among several important offices and agencies. Each one has a specific job.

For exam purposes, the key is to know which agency handles which function.

Chief Financial Officer (CFO)

Florida’s Chief Financial Officer, or CFO, is a statewide elected official and one of the most important figures in Florida insurance regulation.

The CFO plays a central role in overseeing the state’s financial and insurance enforcement functions.

The CFO:

  • Oversees the Department of Financial Services (DFS)
  • Enforces insurance laws involving agents and adjusters
  • Oversees insurance fraud investigations
  • Supervises insurer receivership and rehabilitation
  • Manages unclaimed property

What to remember:

  • The CFO is heavily involved in the regulation of insurance professionals, especially in enforcement-related areas.
Sidenote
Exam Tip

The CFO does not regulate insurance rates or policy forms.

If the question is about agents, fraud, discipline, or receivership, think CFO / DFS.

If the question is about rates, forms, or insurer solvency, think OIR.

Financial Services Commission (FSC)

The Financial Services Commission is a rulemaking body made up of four statewide officials:

  • The Governor
  • The Attorney General
  • The Chief Financial Officer
  • The Commissioner of Agriculture

The FSC has authority to adopt rules governing Florida’s financial services industries.

It oversees two important offices that are often tested:

  • Office of Financial Regulation (OFR)
  • Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR)

Office of Financial Regulation (OFR)

The Office of Financial Regulation regulates financial institutions, not insurance contracts.

OFR regulates:

  • State-chartered banks
  • Credit unions
  • Securities firms
  • Mortgage lenders
  • Finance companies

OFR may:

  • Conduct investigations
  • Issue penalties
  • Revoke registrations
  • Enforce financial laws

What to remember:

  • OFR is part of Florida’s financial regulatory system, but it is not the agency that regulates insurance policies, agents, or insurers.
Sidenote
Exam Tip

If the question is about banks, securities, or lending, think OFR.

If it’s about insurance, do not pick OFR.

Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR)

The Office of Insurance Regulation regulates insurance companies.

That is one of the most important exam distinctions in this entire chapter.

OIR regulates:

  • Insurance companies
  • Policy forms
  • Insurance rates
  • Underwriting rules
  • Insurer solvency

OIR may:

  • Review and approve policy forms
  • Review and approve rate filings
  • Conduct market conduct examinations
  • Investigate company practices
  • Suspend or revoke an insurer’s certificate of authority
  • Issue cease and desist orders
  • Impose administrative fines

What to remember:

  • If the exam question is about the insurance company itself, the answer is usually OIR.

Critical Distinction

  • DFS regulates agents and adjusters
  • OIR regulates insurance companies

That single distinction will answer a huge number of exam questions.

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Florida Insurance Structure

This Florida specific chapter is currently being edited.

Common to All Lines of Insurance

Before you study line-specific material like Life, Health, Property, Casualty, or Personal Lines, you need to understand the legal and regulatory system that applies to all insurance activity in Florida.

This chapter gives you that foundation.

Florida’s insurance system is highly organized, but it can feel confusing at first because multiple agencies share responsibility. One agency regulates agents, another regulates insurance companies, and another regulates banks and securities. The exam loves this distinction.

If you can clearly answer questions like:

  • Who licenses agents?
  • Who regulates insurance companies?
  • Who approves rates and policy forms?
  • Who investigates fraud?
  • Who handles insurer solvency?

…then you will avoid a lot of common exam traps.

Why this chapter matters

Many pre-licensing students try to memorize agency names without understanding the structure. That usually backfires.

Instead, focus on this idea:

Florida separates the regulation of people who sell insurance from the regulation of companies that issue insurance.

That one concept unlocks most of this chapter.

Florida’s Insurance Regulatory Structure

Florida divides financial and insurance regulation among several important offices and agencies. Each one has a specific job.

For exam purposes, the key is to know which agency handles which function.

Chief Financial Officer (CFO)

Florida’s Chief Financial Officer, or CFO, is a statewide elected official and one of the most important figures in Florida insurance regulation.

The CFO plays a central role in overseeing the state’s financial and insurance enforcement functions.

The CFO:

  • Oversees the Department of Financial Services (DFS)
  • Enforces insurance laws involving agents and adjusters
  • Oversees insurance fraud investigations
  • Supervises insurer receivership and rehabilitation
  • Manages unclaimed property

What to remember:

  • The CFO is heavily involved in the regulation of insurance professionals, especially in enforcement-related areas.
Sidenote
Exam Tip

The CFO does not regulate insurance rates or policy forms.

If the question is about agents, fraud, discipline, or receivership, think CFO / DFS.

If the question is about rates, forms, or insurer solvency, think OIR.

Financial Services Commission (FSC)

The Financial Services Commission is a rulemaking body made up of four statewide officials:

  • The Governor
  • The Attorney General
  • The Chief Financial Officer
  • The Commissioner of Agriculture

The FSC has authority to adopt rules governing Florida’s financial services industries.

It oversees two important offices that are often tested:

  • Office of Financial Regulation (OFR)
  • Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR)

Office of Financial Regulation (OFR)

The Office of Financial Regulation regulates financial institutions, not insurance contracts.

OFR regulates:

  • State-chartered banks
  • Credit unions
  • Securities firms
  • Mortgage lenders
  • Finance companies

OFR may:

  • Conduct investigations
  • Issue penalties
  • Revoke registrations
  • Enforce financial laws

What to remember:

  • OFR is part of Florida’s financial regulatory system, but it is not the agency that regulates insurance policies, agents, or insurers.
Sidenote
Exam Tip

If the question is about banks, securities, or lending, think OFR.

If it’s about insurance, do not pick OFR.

Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR)

The Office of Insurance Regulation regulates insurance companies.

That is one of the most important exam distinctions in this entire chapter.

OIR regulates:

  • Insurance companies
  • Policy forms
  • Insurance rates
  • Underwriting rules
  • Insurer solvency

OIR may:

  • Review and approve policy forms
  • Review and approve rate filings
  • Conduct market conduct examinations
  • Investigate company practices
  • Suspend or revoke an insurer’s certificate of authority
  • Issue cease and desist orders
  • Impose administrative fines

What to remember:

  • If the exam question is about the insurance company itself, the answer is usually OIR.

Critical Distinction

  • DFS regulates agents and adjusters
  • OIR regulates insurance companies

That single distinction will answer a huge number of exam questions.