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California Says Insurance Firm State Farm Mishandled LA Wildfires Claims

WASHINGTON, May 4 (Reuters) – The ⁠California ⁠Department of Insurance said ⁠on Monday it was seeking million of dollars in ​penalties against insurance company State Farm for allegedly mishandling claims related to ‌the January 2025 Los Angeles ‌wildfires.

The company denied that it mishandled or underpaid claims.

Here are ⁠some details:

• ⁠The January 2025 wildfires killed 31 people and destroyed or ​damaged more than 16,000 structures.

• Much of the damage was caused by the Eaton Fire in Altadena and the Palisades Fire in Pacific Palisades.

• ​State Farm policy holders filed about 11,300 residential claims related to ⁠the wildfires, ⁠nearly one-third of the ⁠38,835 ​claims filed across all insurers, according to the department.

• The California Department ​of Insurance said ⁠its examiners reviewed a sample of 220 claims and found 398 violations of state law in 114 of those claims.

• The maximum penalty amount will be around $4 million if the company is found to ⁠be engaging in “willful violations” of state law.

• The department says it ⁠has filed an “Accusation and Order to Show Cause” against State Farm, which marks the first step toward a public hearing before an administrative law judge.

• California’s homeowners insurance market is the most dysfunctional in the country, State Farm said in response.

• The company said the state Department of Insurance “should take responsibility for regulatory delays.”

• “We reject any suggestion State Farm engaged in ⁠a general practice of mishandling or intentionally underpaying wildfire claims, and we will respond through the process,” it said.

• State Farm said it has paid out more than $5.7 billion on ​13,700 auto and home insurance claims related to the ​fires.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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