Personal Injury and Medical Malpractice Lawyer in Tampa, FL
Insurance Bad Faith

When your insurer stops acting in good faith, we step in.

Stratigakos Law helps Tampa Bay clients evaluate whether an insurer’s conduct crossed the line into bad faith, and pursues accountability with direct attorney involvement throughout.

Direct access to Attorney Helen Stratigakos throughout your case

Experience with denied, delayed, and undervalued claims

Support with first-party and third-party bad faith situations

Honest assessment of whether bad faith occurred

Free consultation available

Why choose Stratigakos Law

Insurance bad faith cases require a detailed understanding of the policy at issue and the insurer's internal claims-handling conduct. Stratigakos Law reviews the full claims file, explains the process in plain language, and pursues accountability directly rather than accepting an insurer's initial position at face value.

Common Insurance Bad Faith Situations We Handle

Unreasonable Claim Denial
Unjustified Delay in Payment
Lowball Settlement Offers
Failure to Properly Investigate
Failure to Settle Within Policy Limits
Misrepresentation of Coverage

Understanding your case

Insurers owe policyholders a duty to handle claims fairly and in good faith. When an insurer unreasonably denies, delays, or underpays a valid claim, this conduct may give rise to a bad faith claim separate from the underlying claim itself.

First-party bad faith involves an insurer's conduct toward its own policyholder. Third-party bad faith typically arises when an insurer fails to settle a liability claim within policy limits.

Florida generally requires policyholders to file a civil remedy notice with the state, giving the insurer an opportunity to cure the alleged bad faith conduct before a lawsuit may proceed.

Depending on the circumstances, a successful bad faith claim may allow recovery beyond normal policy limits.

Frequently asked questions

Insurance bad faith, answered honestly

Insurance bad faith occurs when an insurer unreasonably denies, delays, or underpays a valid claim, or otherwise fails to handle a claim fairly.

Florida generally requires policyholders to file a civil remedy notice before pursuing a bad faith lawsuit, giving the insurer a defined window to cure the issue.

Possibly, if the denial was unreasonable given the facts and coverage available. A consultation can help evaluate the specific denial.

A bad faith claim is typically brought against your own insurer in first-party situations. An attorney can explain how this process works.

Let's talk about what happened.

Free, honest consultation — no obligation, no pressure.