Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price’s Consumer Justice Bureau has sued multiple home insurance carriers in California, including Farmers Insurance Exchange, alleging they’re operating a scheme that knowingly and systematically underinsures homes in California.
The complaint alleges these carriers provide consumers with inaccurately low replacement cost estimates, far less than what is needed to rebuild homes in the event of a disaster. The bureau says this violates insurance regulations requiring any such communication to “include the expenses that would reasonably be incurred to rebuild the insured structure(s) in its entirety.”
According to the charges, insurers generate replacement cost estimates though third-party software that considers little information about a specific home to be insured, instead relying on generalized features like the home’s ZIP code.
The complaint alleges the amount of insurance coverage purchased by homeowners is based on an estimate to rebuild a hypothetical home, not the actual home for which consumers are purchasing coverage. By avoiding the costs required to obtain detailed information about a home’s actual characteristics, home insurers offer lower premiums to increase their competitive position in the marketplace. However, this also leads to systemic underinsurance in California, leaving homeowners without the means to replace what are often their most valuable assets.
The complaint alleges this scheme violates numerous California laws, including Insurance Code regulations and California’s Unfair Competition and False Advertising Laws. The lawsuit seeks civil penalties and injunctive relief prohibiting home insurance carriers from continuing their conduct harming homeowners across California.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.

What to Expect in 2026: US P/C Results More Like 2024
Owner of Historic Minnesota Resort Charged With Arson, Insurance Fraud
Florida Jury Returns $779M Verdict for Family of Security Guard Killed at Gambling Cafe
One of Highest Property Claims Severity Recorded in Q3 on Low Volume, Says Verisk 


