When you file an insurance claim, New York law does not give your insurer unlimited time to investigate, decide, and pay. Prompt payment statutes establish firm deadlines for each stage of the claims process, and violations carry real financial consequences. Most policyholders never know these deadlines exist.
Prompt payment statutes govern three stages: (1) acknowledgment — the insurer must confirm receipt of your claim; (2) investigation — the insurer must accept or deny within a set period after receiving proof of loss; and (3) payment — once accepted, payment must be issued within a set timeframe. Failure at any stage can constitute a violation.
Most states attach financial penalties to prompt payment violations — typically interest on delayed amounts, and in some states attorney's fees and additional damages if bad faith is established. Knowing these penalties exist gives you leverage when dealing with a slow-moving claims department.
Document every interaction with your insurer. Record dates of submission, adjuster conversations, and promises. If deadlines pass, send written notice by certified mail. Some statutory rights are triggered only if you put the insurer on formal notice of the delay.
Prompt payment violations can be evidence of bad faith, but the two claims are distinct. A prompt payment claim requires only that the insurer missed a deadline. A bad faith claim requires showing the insurer acted unreasonably more broadly. Both can result in damages beyond the original claim.
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Regulatory resource: New York Department of Financial Services — https://www.dfs.ny.gov. The Insurance Professor provides education only — not legal or insurance advice.