On October 10, 2025, the Illinois attorney general, on behalf of the Illinois insurance director, filed a complaint in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Chancery Division, Case No. 2025 CH 10454, against a large group of Illinois domestic property and casualty insurers (insurer), alleging that the insurer failed to comply with Illinois insurance laws by refusing to provide information about the homeowners policies the insurer has issued nationwide. A copy of the complaint is found here. In particular, the insurance director has asserted that the insurer’s refusal to provide the information on a nationwide basis in the context of a targeted financial examination violates the following insurance examination statutes (collectively, the examination laws): (a) Conduct of examinations; appointment of examiners (215 ILCS 5/132.4(b)); (b) Market conduct examinations (215 ILCS 5/132(d)); (c) Insurance Holding Company System Act – Examination of registered insurers (215 ILCS 5/131.21(1.5)); and Unfair Methods of Competition and Unfair and Deceptive Acts and Practices – Examinations and investigations (215 ILCS 5/425). The alleged violations arise under a targeted financial exam warrant issued to the insurer in November 2024 (warrant). The warrant references the insurance director’s statutory authority under the examination laws, as well as the insurance director’s general powers and enforcement authority. The court has scheduled a hearing for December 15, 2025. The insurance director is seeking declaratory relief from the court that would require the insurer to provide the nationwide information requested.Read More Can Illinois Insurance Regulators Request Nationwide Homeowners Policy Information Under Examination Laws?

In a press release dated September 19, 2025, Commissioner Ricardo Lara announced proposed changes to California’s rate review and intervenor system. The state’s intervenor system, initially established by Proposition 103 in 1988 and last updated in 2006, currently authorizes “intervenors” to participate in rate review. The system allows intervenors to recover costs, expenses, and attorneys’ fees related to their intervention from insurers. By law, insurers are permitted to pass these costs on to consumers.Read More California Commissioner Announces Proposed Changes to Proposition 103 and Intervenor Process

On September 26, 2025, Governor Kathy Hochul of New York signed into law AB 5600 (the Bill), which amends N.Y. Ins. Law §7425 to address the treatment of voidable transfers involving Federal Home Loan Banks (FHLBs), as well as the conduct of parties to delinquency proceedings against New York domiciled insurer-members of an FHLB. FHLBs are government-sponsored entities that lend to members on a fully secured basis at a low interest rate. According to the legislative findings accompanying the Bill (the Legislative Findings), FHLBs were created during the Great Depression to provide easy liquidity for banks and insurance companies and to provide a stabilizing mechanism in times of economic uncertainty.[1] Insurance companies and depository institutions must apply for membership, subject to approval by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, and purchase a certain amount of stock in the FHLB to avail themselves of member benefits.[2]Read More New York Amends Voidable Transactions Law for Application to Federal Home Loan Banks

New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced today that Adrienne Harris will step down as superintendent of the New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS), effective October 18. Following Harris’s departure, Hochul has appointed Kaitlin Asrow to serve as acting superintendent.Read More NYDFS Announces Leadership Change: Adrienne Harris to Step Down, Kaitlin Asrow Named Acting Superintendent

What Happened

In a press release published August 25, New York Senators James Skoufis, Jamaal Bailey, and Brian Kavanagh announced a joint investigation into residential property insurance. The purpose of the investigation is “to identify the causes of reported increases in premiums and other obstacles to insuring new and existing single- and multi-family homes, including those occupied by homeowners and renters, and to identify legislation and policy changes that New York State should implement.”Read More New York Legislators Investigate Residential Property Insurance

On August 20, 2025, the Colorado Division of Insurance (Division) amended Regulation 10-1-1 to expand its existing limited applicability to insurers offering individual life insurance to apply to insurers offering private passenger auto and health benefit plans effective October 15, 2025. Evidence of compliance with the amended regulation must be made available to the Division upon request for private passenger auto and health benefit plan insurers beginning on July 1, 2026.Read More Colorado Division of Insurance Expands AI Governance and Framework Regulation to Private Passenger Auto and Health Benefit Plan Insurers

The insurance industry is facing increased scrutiny from insurance regulators related to its use of artificial intelligence (AI). Red teaming can be leveraged to address some of the risks associated with an insurer’s use of AI. The U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) defines a “red team”[1] as:Read More Red Teaming Is an Effective Tool for Insurer Assessment of AI Risks

On August 1, 2025, Governor JB Pritzker approved Senate Bill No. 1289, amending the definition of “home state” as it relates to more than one unaffiliated insured from a group and named as insureds on a single surplus lines insurance contract. Prior to the enactment of the bill, if

Read More Illinois Amends the Definition of “Home State” for Unaffiliated Groups Under Its Surplus Lines Laws

On June 10, 2025, Governor Lamont signed Senate Bill No. 9 into law. In light of the passage of the bill, on July 8, 2025, the Connecticut Insurance Department (Department) issued Bulletin PC-93-25, addressed to “all companies licensed to write homeowners and renters insurance.” The bulletin “provides guidance to

Read More New Connecticut Flood Insurance Disclosure Requirements