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Lender-Placed Insurance

Last Updated 3/20/2024

Lender-placed insurance, also known as “creditor-placed” or “force-placed” insurance is an insurance policy placed by a bank or mortgage servicer on a home when the homeowners’ own property insurance may have lapsed or where the bank deems the homeowners’ insurance insufficient. All mortgages require borrowers to maintain adequate homeowners insurance on their property. Borrowers can fail to maintain the required coverage for a variety of reasons—cancellation, a withdrawal by their existing insurer, or even just a simple oversight. However, if the policy lapses or is canceled and the borrower does not secure a replacement policy, most mortgages allow the lender to purchase insurance for the home and “force-place” it. These standard provisions allow the lender to protect its financial interest in the property (its collateral) if a calamity occurs.

The practice of lender-placed insurance has attracted increased media coverage in recent years. The attention has primarily focused on the rates charged for lender-placed insurance policies and whether insurers and lenders are making “excess” profits on this line of business. Typically, the lender-placed insurance premiums are significantly higher than the property insurance the borrower could have purchased on their own. In addition to being more expensive, the lender-placed insurance policy also has limited coverage. For example, these policies generally do not cover personal items or owner liability. If a borrower does not pay the lender-placed insurance policy premium, they could be at risk of foreclose.

Concern have also been raised over whether the growing use of lender-placed insurance is “reverse competition,” where the lender chooses the coverage provider and amount, yet the consumer is obligated to pay the cost of coverage. Reverse competition is a market condition that tends to drive up premium prices to the consumers, as the lender is not motivated to select the lowest price for coverage since the cost is born by the borrower. Normally competitive forces tend to drive down costs for consumers. However, in this case, the lender is motivated to select coverage from an insurer looking out for the lender’s interest rather than the borrower.

Insurance regulators in Florida, California, New York and Texas, have held public hearings to learn more about these products and practices. A public hearing on lender-placed insurance was held on May 17, 2012, at the New York State Department of Financial Services. After the hearing, New York State's Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and then-Superintendent of Financial Services Benjamin M. Lawsky announced that lender-placed insurers operating in New York must lower the premiums they charge. “Our hearings suggest a lack of competition, high prices and low loss ratios, all of which hurt homeowners,” Lawsky said in the release.

State regulators, individually and through the NAIC, are also reviewing lender-placed insurance. On August 9, 2012, the Property and Casualty Insurance (C) Committee and the Market Regulation and Consumer Affairs (D) Committee held a public hearing to further discuss the use of lender-placed insurance and the effect of the practice on consumers. The hearing took place at the 2012 NAIC Summer National Meeting. Presentations, testimony and audio of the public hearing are available on this page under the ‘Additional Resources' sidebar. The Real Property Lender-Placed Insurance Model Act was adopted in 2020.