How to Get Help for Public Adjuster
Navigating an insurance claim after property damage is one of the more demanding administrative challenges a policyholder will face. The process involves policy interpretation, damage documentation, negotiation with a carrier's own adjuster, and deadlines that vary by state and policy type. A public adjuster is a licensed professional who works exclusively on behalf of the policyholder — not the insurance company — to document losses, interpret policy language, and negotiate settlements. Knowing when and how to get credible help on matters involving a public adjuster is a distinct skill, and this page addresses it directly.
Understanding What Kind of Help You Actually Need
Before seeking assistance, it helps to identify the specific question or problem. "Help with a public adjuster" means something different depending on where you are in the process.
If you have not yet hired a public adjuster, the relevant questions involve how to evaluate candidates, understand fee agreements, and verify licensing. If you have already hired one and have concerns about conduct, fees, or communication, the path forward involves your state's Department of Insurance and, potentially, a complaint process or contract review. If your claim has been underpaid or denied and you are unsure whether a public adjuster can help, that is an eligibility and strategy question.
Each of these situations calls for a different resource. Conflating them often leads policyholders to the wrong kind of help — or to scam operators who exploit the confusion. See the Public Adjuster Red Flags and Scams page for a detailed breakdown of common deceptive practices targeting claimants.
Common Barriers to Getting Reliable Information
Several structural factors make it difficult to get straightforward, accurate information about public adjusters.
Licensing complexity. Public adjusters are regulated at the state level with no uniform federal standard. Requirements differ substantially between jurisdictions. California, Florida, Texas, and New York each have distinct licensing statutes, fee caps, and post-disaster solicitation rules. A practice that is legal in one state may constitute a violation in another. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) maintains model regulations, but adoption is inconsistent. For state-specific rules, consult your state's Department of Insurance directly or refer to the State-by-State Public Adjuster Regulations Reference on this site.
Conflicts of interest in available advice. Much of the publicly available information about public adjusters comes from sources with a financial interest in the outcome — either public adjusters marketing their own services, or insurance carriers who have an incentive to discourage claimants from hiring professional representation. Independent, authoritative information requires identifying sources with no direct stake in your hiring decision.
Fee misunderstanding. Public adjusters typically work on contingency, meaning they receive a percentage of the final settlement. In most states, that percentage is capped by statute. Florida, for example, caps fees at 20% on non-catastrophe claims and 10% during a declared state of emergency under Florida Statutes § 626.854. Misunderstanding how fees work leads to poor decisions about when hiring representation is financially rational. See Public Adjuster Fee Structures for a full explanation.
How to Evaluate the Qualifications of a Public Adjuster
Licensing is the floor, not the ceiling, of qualification. Every public adjuster practicing in a state must hold a valid license from that state's Department of Insurance. Verification takes minutes and should be done before any contract is signed. Instructions for doing this are covered in detail at How to Verify a Public Adjuster License.
Beyond licensure, two professional credentialing bodies provide voluntary designations that indicate advanced training:
- **The National Association of Public Insurance Adjusters (NAPIA)** is the primary professional organization for public adjusters in the United States. Founded in 1951, NAPIA provides a code of ethics, continuing education requirements, and a member directory. Membership does not guarantee competence, but it does signal a baseline commitment to professional standards. NAPIA's website (napia.com) allows credential verification.
- **The American Institute for Chartered Property Casualty Underwriters (The Institutes)** offers the **Associate in Claims (AIC)** designation, which some public adjusters pursue to deepen their technical knowledge of claims handling. While not specific to public adjusters, it reflects advanced study in property and casualty claims principles.
- National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) — Model Laws, Regulations, and Guidelines
- California Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1 — Cornell Legal Information Institute
- 18 U.S.C. § 1033 — Crimes by or Affecting Persons Engaged in the Business of Insurance (Cornell LII)
- 18 U.S.C. § 1033 — Crimes by or affecting persons engaged in the business of insurance (via Cornell
- Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Article 2 — Cornell Legal Information Institute
- National Flood Insurance Act, 42 U.S.C. § 4012a — Cornell Legal Information Institute
- Cornell Legal Information Institute — Insurance Law Overview
- Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute — Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
Some states also have their own associations. The California Association of Public Insurance Adjusters (CAPIA) and the Florida Association of Public Insurance Adjusters (FAPIA) both provide member directories and conduct professional education programs.
For guidance on what to look for when assessing specific candidates, see How to Find a Qualified Public Adjuster.
Questions Worth Asking Before You Commit
Engaging a public adjuster involves signing a contract that governs your legal relationship throughout the claim. The questions below are not exhaustive, but they address the issues most commonly misunderstood or omitted.
What is your license number, and in which states are you currently licensed? What percentage of the settlement do you charge, and are there any additional fees for supplemental claims? Have you handled claims of this type — fire, water, wind, theft — with damage in this range? Can you provide references from clients with comparable claims? What does your contract say about termination, and what fees apply if the relationship ends before settlement?
The contract itself deserves close review before signing. Key clauses to examine include the fee percentage, the scope of authority granted to the adjuster, and provisions governing what happens if you are dissatisfied with the settlement offer. A full discussion of contract terms is available at Public Adjuster Contract: What to Know.
When to Involve Your State Department of Insurance
If a public adjuster has behaved in a way that appears to violate state law — charging fees above statutory caps, soliciting you within a prohibited window after a disaster, failing to return documents, or misrepresenting settlement figures — the appropriate body for a formal complaint is your state's Department of Insurance.
Every state has one. The NAIC's website (naic.org) maintains a directory of all state insurance departments with direct contact information. Filing a complaint does not guarantee a resolution to your specific claim situation, but it creates an official record and triggers an investigation that can result in license suspension or revocation.
If the dispute involves the contract itself, or if you believe you were misled into signing an agreement under duress or through misrepresentation, consulting a licensed attorney who practices insurance law in your state is appropriate. State bar associations maintain referral services that can help identify attorneys with relevant experience.
Where to Go From Here
Getting competent help on a public adjuster matter requires knowing which question you are actually trying to answer. For foundational knowledge about the profession itself, start with What Is a Public Adjuster. For a review of your rights throughout the claims process, see Policyholder Rights When Using a Public Adjuster. If you are unsure whether your situation even warrants professional representation, When to Hire a Public Adjuster provides a grounded framework for that decision.
The most important protection available to any claimant is accurate information before a contract is signed. State regulators, established professional associations like NAPIA, and independent reference resources exist precisely to support that kind of informed decision-making. Use them.