Insurance Service Of Sarasota

Insurance Service Of Sarasota We are a Full Service Independent Insurance Agency in Sarasota, Florida. We offer many different typ The Insurance Service of Sarasota, Inc. has you covered.

is a full-service, all-lines, independent insurance agency. Our many relationships within the industry allow us to offer individual and corporate clients a great variety of coverage options at competitive prices. Explore the different types of insurance we offer, and then contact us to discuss the appropriate coverage for your specific needs. For our customers’ benefit, we offer a host of differen

t insurance policies. We understand that life can happen in a flash, which is exactly why our selection is as extensive as it is. Whether you’re a business owner, condo owner, or looking to insure your vehicle before your next big road trip, Insurance Service of Sarasota, Inc.

🚗 Auto insurance is more than just a legal requirement; it's your safeguard against the financial consequences of car ac...
02/08/2025

🚗 Auto insurance is more than just a legal requirement; it's your safeguard against the financial consequences of car accidents. From covering medical expenses to repairing damaged vehicles, auto insurance provides peace of mind on the road. 🚔

Protecting your vehicle is essential. 📋✨ Get a personalized auto insurance quote today to ensure peace of mind on the ro...
02/07/2025

Protecting your vehicle is essential. 📋✨ Get a personalized auto insurance quote today to ensure peace of mind on the road. We're here to help you navigate your options with professionalism and care. 🚗💼

The Insurance Service of Sarasota, Inc. has been keeping Sarasota, FL, residents insured with affordable policies since 1972. Call 941-966-5606 now.

11/04/2024

While the repairs in our office still have a ways to go, we are now open to the public with our normal hours of Mon-Fri 8:00 am-4:30 pm. Thank you for your patience during this unheralded time and we hope that everyone else is beginning to get "back to normal" as much as possible.

10/15/2024

Our physical office is still without power/internet and the damages we sustained are slowly being repaired so we are still closed to visitors. We are all now fully working remotely and can assist with information such as your carrier name, policy # and how/where to file a claim. Due to the abundance of calls/emails we are receiving, we are still respectively requesting our clients to self-report your losses for the fastest service. Thank you for your patience and understanding in this unprecedented situation!

10/14/2024

Following Hurricane Milton, our physical office sustained fairly moderate damage including our roof and we are still without power or internet. We apologize if you have tried to reach us by email or phone as they both require access to power and internet. We have a generator but it is running our dry-out fans at this time.

If you sustained damage and wish to file a claim, we respectfully request that you contact your carrier direct as we are unable to assist at the moment.

10/07/2024

Due to the forecasted Hurricane Milton's trajectory, our office will close today, Monday 10/7, at noon so our employees may prepare for the storm. We will reopen Tuesday as long as we are able and as soon as we can safely can following the hurricane. Please prepare now and evacuate if told to do so!

09/30/2024
09/24/2024

We are currently in a moratorium for binding new business, decreasing deductibles, increasing coverage, etc due to the impending Hurricane Helene. Now would be a good time to video each room in your house as proof of your belongings should you suffer damages. Also locate your important documents, such as wills, insurance policies, social security cards, etc and be sure you have a list of all of your medications available and in a safe place.

08/28/2023

Due to Hurricane Idalia projected for the area, our office is closed. We will be working remotely from home on Tuesday & Wednesday and depending on conditions, plan to return to the office on Thursday morning. All carriers have placed a moratorium on new business and/or adding or increasing coverage or decreasing deductibles at this time! Please prepare now and stay safe!

WE ARE CELEBRATING THE AGENCY'S 50th ANNIVERSARY SO OUR OFFICE WILL BE CLOSED THIS FRIDAY (5/5) THRU MONDAY (5/8).  WE W...
05/03/2023

WE ARE CELEBRATING THE AGENCY'S 50th ANNIVERSARY SO OUR OFFICE WILL BE CLOSED THIS FRIDAY (5/5) THRU MONDAY (5/8). WE WILL REOPEN WITH NORMAL BUSINESS HOURS ON TUESDAY (5/9). IF YOU HAVE A LOSS DURING THIS TIME, PLEASE CONTACT THE INSURANCE COMPANY DIRECT TO REPORT YOUR LOSS. YOU CAN FIND THE CLAIM PHONE # AND/OR EMAIL ADDRESS IN YOUR APPLICABLE POLICY/DEC PAGES OR ON YOUR ID CARD IF AN AUTO ACCIDENT.

05/03/2023

Florida’s insurance crisis: 2 special sessions, little help | Commentary
By SCOTT MAXWELL | [email protected] |
PUBLISHED: May 2, 2023 at 5:31 p.m. | UPDATED: May 3, 2023 at 6:31 a.m.

For years, Florida lawmakers ignored a looming insurance crisis.

Then, with rates skyrocketing and companies fleeing the state, they scrambled to call not one, but two special sessions, vowing to help.

Well, my wife and I saw what the Legislature’s version of help looks like a few months ago when our insurance bill jumped from $4,000 to $7,000.

Any more “help “like that and we’ll be eating cat food.

In reality, we’ll be just fine. But a growing number of Floridians are facing bills they can barely afford as prices skyrocket throughout the state.

The Insurance Information Institute predicted increases of 40% throughout Florida this year. Some companies have requested 60% hikes. And scores of Floridians are still being dropped by their carriers while the state-run Citizens Property Insurance keeps bloating.

This is an undeniable, mounting mess.

So once again, GOP legislators – who have spent the better part of the past two years waging culture wars – have cobbled together another insurance bill.

lawmakers who repeatedly warned his colleagues to take action years ago and was largely ignored.

“Nothing in this bill lowers rates,” Brandes, who now runs the Florida Policy Project, said this week. “Nothing in this bill encourages more companies to come.”

Brandes and I have differing views on some aspects of reform – particularly as it relates to the transparency measures and regulations that subsidized insurance companies should face.

But we agree on three key things:

1. Despite years of yapping about fraud claims driving up costs and rates, Florida lawmakers have never cracked down on bad actors in any meaningful fashion.

2. The solutions they’re talking about now aren’t going to do much, if anything, to bring down rates.

3. Any meaningful solution – in a state like ours that’s basically a bullseye for hurricanes and increasingly at risk of flooding – is going to involve a boatload of public money.

Brandes and I may have varied thoughts on how that money should be spent. But the reality is that this problem – where the state-run insurance company is now covering millions of Floridians at increasingly high rates – requires a major investment and serious policy reform.

And that’s not good news for a Legislature that specializes in divisive bumper-sticker priorities – dragging Disney, fuming about drag queens and decrying wokeism.

When it comes to hard, serious policy work, they are either unwilling or incapable of getting the job done. At least when it comes to insurance.

A clear example of that is fraud. For years, lawmakers have blamed fraudulent claims for driving up insurance costs and driving companies out of the state. But they haven’t done squat from an enforcement standpoint.

“If you want talent in the Office of Insurance Regulation – which should be one of the most talented in the state – you have to pay for it,” Brandes said.

That seems obvious. If your city had a rash of burglaries, you’d beef up your burglary patrol. But Florida politicians have whined about fraud without ever dedicating serious resources to exposing, punishing and stopping it.

If they can set up a statewide election-crime police force to deal with fever-dream problems, you’d think they’d beef up their insurance team to deal with an actual financial nightmare.

But to really bring down prices, we need more competition among providers. Or we need to invest more in Citizens – and basically accept that a giant, costly state-run insurance company is the only way we’re going to be able to cover everyone in a state that’s both storm-ravaged and low-wage.

Few people really want that second option. Certainly not Brandes. But many of us aren’t super keen either on just handing over tax dollars to an industry with a track record of hosing its policy holders.

Just a few weeks ago, the Washington Post published a maddening investigative report that found Florida insurance companies were financially victimizing hurricane survivors by gutting their claims and payments – sometimes by as much as 90% of what the companies’ own adjusters said the homeowners were due. The piece featured an adjuster who said one insurance company took his report – which estimated $200,000 in valid claims for one home – and whittled it down to just $27,000 without his knowledge or consent.

Brandes prefers offering companies incentives to write Florida policies. That may be worth exploring – with a lot of checks and balances added in.

But here’s the bottom line: Either scenario – majorly subsidizing private industries or growing/transforming Citizens into something like a Florida version of Medicare for homeowners – is painful. They’re both costly, politically unpopular and involve a lot of hard work.

Unfortunately, most Florida politicians don’t want to do hard work or make unpopular moves. So they just keep screaming about critical race theory and transgender athletes. And while they scream, your rates keep rising.

I think we’re heading toward a pain point – where even the Floridians who used to laugh at the culture wars are going to stop laughing once they realize they can barely afford to stay in their homes. That may be when they start finally putting people in office who are more interested in solving problems than creating them.

Address

873 South Tamiami Trail
Osprey, FL
34229

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4:30pm
Tuesday 8am - 4:30pm
Wednesday 8am - 4:30pm
Thursday 8am - 4:30pm
Friday 8am - 4:30pm

Telephone

+19419665606

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