What Is the Florida Market Assistance Plan?
The Florida Market Assistance Plan — commonly known as FMAP — is a free service created by the Florida legislature under Florida Statutes 627.3515. It's administered by the Florida Department of Financial Services and has been in operation since the 1990s.
FMAP was designed with a clear and important purpose: to help Florida homeowners who are having difficulty finding property insurance in the private market. If your policy has been non-renewed, cancelled, or you simply can't find a carrier willing to insure your home, FMAP provides a way to get your property in front of insurance professionals who may be able to help.
It's free, it's legitimate, and it's a genuinely useful resource for homeowners in a tough spot. But like any tool, it's worth understanding how it works before you use it.
Need help finding Florida home insurance now? Skip the wait — we shop 10+ carriers for your property directly.
Get Your Free Review →How FMAP Distributes Your Information
When you submit a request through FMAP at FMAP.org, here's what happens behind the scenes:
- You provide your property details — address, property type, construction year, roof age, current coverage status, and contact information.
- FMAP distributes your submission to its network of participating agents and carriers. This is the part most homeowners don't fully realize — your information isn't sent to one agent or a small handful. It's made available to thousands of participating insurance professionals across the state.
- Any participating agent or carrier can review your submission and decide whether to contact you with a quote or coverage option.
- You may receive responses from multiple agents — or in some cases, none at all. There's no guarantee of a response, and you have no control over how many agents see your information or who contacts you.
This broad distribution model is by design. FMAP's goal is to cast the widest possible net to maximize the chances that some carrier, somewhere in Florida, will be willing to write your property. For hard-to-place risks — older homes, coastal properties, homes with claims history — casting a wide net can be exactly what's needed.
What This Means for Your Experience
Because FMAP shares your information broadly, homeowners who submit through the program should be prepared for a few realities:
You may receive multiple contacts
Since your property details go to thousands of participating professionals, you could hear from several agents — each offering to help. This can actually be a positive thing, as it gives you options to compare. But it can also feel overwhelming if you're not expecting it. If you receive multiple calls or emails after submitting, that's the FMAP system working as designed — not an error.
Response times vary
FMAP doesn't guarantee a response timeline. Some homeowners hear back within days, while others wait weeks. Busy periods — like hurricane season or after major legislative changes — tend to produce slower response times as the system processes higher volumes.
No single advocate
FMAP doesn't negotiate on your behalf, explain your coverage options, or apply your wind mitigation credits to find better rates. It's a distribution system, not an advisory service. The agents who contact you will each be working independently — they won't be coordinating with each other or comparing notes to find you the best overall option.
Coverage quality varies
When agents respond through FMAP, they're each presenting their own carrier options. Without someone comparing all the responses side by side, it can be difficult to know whether the first offer you receive is actually the best one available for your property.
Want one agent who shops 10+ carriers for your specific property — without sharing your info broadly?
Get a Focused Review →FMAP vs. Working with an Independent Agent
Both FMAP and independent agents serve the same goal — helping you find home insurance coverage. But they work in very different ways. Here's an honest comparison:
| FMAP | Independent Agent | |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Free | Free (agents are paid by carriers, not you) |
| Who sees your info | Thousands of participating agents statewide | One agent shops carriers on your behalf |
| How many carriers searched | Depends on who responds to your submission | 10–20+ carriers compared directly |
| Response time | Days to weeks | Often 24–48 hours |
| Personal advocacy | None — distribution only | Agent presents your property's strengths, applies credits, negotiates |
| Coverage explanation | None from FMAP itself | Agent reviews options and explains coverage in plain language |
| Wind mitigation applied | Only if responding agent requests it | Applied proactively to maximize savings |
| Ongoing relationship | No — one-time submission | Ongoing service, annual re-shopping, claims help |
Neither option is inherently better — they serve different situations. FMAP's broad distribution can be especially valuable for truly hard-to-place risks where finding any carrier willing to write the policy is the primary goal. An independent agent provides a more focused, personal experience with faster results and ongoing service.
When FMAP Makes the Most Sense
FMAP is a particularly good option when:
- Your property has been declined by multiple carriers. If an independent agent has already exhausted their carrier options, FMAP's broader network might surface a participating carrier or agent with a specialty market for your risk type.
- You're in a very high-risk area. Homeowners in Monroe County (the Keys), barrier islands, or other locations where very few carriers operate may benefit from FMAP's statewide reach.
- You don't have an agent yet. If you haven't connected with an independent agent and need to start somewhere, FMAP is a free, zero-commitment way to signal to the market that you're looking for coverage.
- You want to maximize every possible avenue. Submitting to FMAP costs nothing and takes a few minutes. Even if you're already working with an agent, there's no downside to having another line in the water.
When a Direct Agent Relationship Might Be a Better Starting Point
An independent agent tends to be the faster and more focused option when:
- You need coverage quickly. If you've been non-renewed and have a 30–60 day window, an agent who can shop 10+ carriers in 24–48 hours is usually more responsive than FMAP's broader timeline.
- You want one point of contact. Rather than potentially hearing from multiple agents after an FMAP submission, some homeowners prefer working with a single agent who shops the market on their behalf and presents organized options.
- Your property has specific features that need to be presented well. A recent roof, impact windows, or a clean claims history can significantly affect your rate — an agent highlights these proactively, while FMAP simply distributes your raw property data.
- You want ongoing service. An independent agent relationship extends beyond the initial policy — annual re-shopping, claims advocacy, coverage reviews as your situation changes. FMAP is a one-time submission.
How to Submit to FMAP
If you decide FMAP is right for your situation, the process is simple:
- Visit FMAP.org
- Complete the property information form — you'll need your property address, construction details, roof age, and current insurance status.
- Submit and wait. There's no cost and no obligation. If participating agents or carriers are interested in your property, they'll reach out to you directly.
Keep in mind that submitting to FMAP doesn't obligate you to accept any offer you receive. You're free to compare any FMAP responses with quotes from your own independent agent, from Citizens Property Insurance, or from any other source.
The Bottom Line
FMAP is a legitimate, free, and useful resource for Florida homeowners struggling to find coverage. It was created specifically for situations where the standard market isn't working, and it's helped thousands of Floridians find policies they couldn't find on their own.
The key is understanding how it works before you submit. Your property information is shared broadly across thousands of participating agents — that's the mechanism that makes the program effective. For some homeowners, that broad distribution is exactly what's needed. For others, a more focused approach through an independent agent gets faster results with a single point of contact.
Many homeowners use both — and that's often the smartest approach. Submit to FMAP as a free backup while an independent agent actively shops your property across their carrier appointments. You lose nothing, and you maximize your chances of finding the best available coverage for your Florida home.
Ready for a focused, one-on-one coverage review? We compare 10+ carriers for your specific property.
Start Your Free Review →