Your insurer's right to cancel or non-renew your policy is not unlimited. Texas law strictly regulates when, why, and how an insurer can end your coverage — and gives you specific rights to respond, appeal, or find alternative coverage during a mandatory notice period.
Cancellation terminates a policy before its expiration date. Nonrenewal occurs when the insurer decides not to offer a new policy at expiration. These are legally distinct with different rules. Mid-term cancellation faces the most restrictions and requires the strongest justification.
Texas law limits mid-term cancellation to specific reasons: nonpayment of premium, material misrepresentation or fraud, and in some cases a significant increase in the risk insured. An insurer cannot cancel simply because you filed a claim or because the insurer no longer wants to write that type of policy.
When an insurer cancels or non-renews your policy, it must provide written notice a minimum number of days in advance. These requirements give you time to find replacement coverage. The notice must state the specific reason for the action. If the reason is vague or pretextual, you have grounds to challenge.
First, note the effective date — you need replacement coverage before that date. Request a written explanation of the specific reason if unclear. Contact your agent immediately to explore alternatives. If you believe the cancellation is wrongful, file a complaint with the Texas insurance department.
The Insurance Professor is trained on Texas insurance law and regulation. Ask about your policy, your claim, or your rights.
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Regulatory resource: Texas Department of Insurance — https://www.tdi.texas.gov. The Insurance Professor provides education only — not legal or insurance advice.