Getting a denial letter from your pet coverage company always hits harder than expected.
You’ve been paying into a policy, trusting it would be there when your pet needed care, and then it just isn’t. But, a denial letter they receive is not a legal verdict; it’s the coverage company’s interpretation of your policy, and interpretations can be wrong.
Florida has a dedicated legislation governing how animal insurance companies must handle exclusions, disclosures, and the burden of proof in claim disputes: the Florida Pet Insurance Act, codified in Florida Statute § 627.71545.
The legal weight in a pre-existing condition dispute sits with the company, not with you.
What you’re about to read is a breakdown of the method most pet lawyers use to evaluate and fight pet coverage denials in Florida. Keep reading, your situation may be more recoverable than you think.
The denial letter & the opening move
Pet lawyers in Florida consistently identify the same patterns when reviewing denial letters on behalf of clients:
- The exclusion is applied without supporting clinical evidence: they draw a link between past and present conditions that your veterinarian never made and the records don’t establish
- Waiting period denials often miscount from the wrong start date, particularly when a policy was transferred or upgraded
- Partial payments arrive with no formula provided and makes it impossible to verify whether the reimbursement matches what the policy actually requires
- Missing records that were never explicitly required at the time of enrollment
- The letter references language that contradicts the statutory definitions Florida law requires coverage companies to use. Only visible when you read both documents side by side
The attorney’s method starts with reading the denial against the policy, the policy against Florida law, and the law against what was actually disclosed to you before you purchased the plan.
A lawyer’s method, step by step
Read the denial against the policy, word for word
If the company’s definition is broader or more ambiguous than what the law allows, the denial built on that definition is on shaky ground. This has resolved cases before a single letter is sent to the insurer.
Pull the full veterinary history and build a timeline
The goal is to identify whether the condition the company cited as pre-existing was actually present, diagnosed, or symptomatically documented before coverage began, or whether the company stretched the definition to reach that conclusion.
Get your veterinarian on record
If your vet’s professional assessment is that the current condition is unrelated to anything previously noted in the records, that statement must be addressed by the company in any response.
Submit a formal written appeal with supporting evidence
A formal letter to the insurance company explaining why the claim should be approved, with additional evidence such as statements from your vet, is the foundation of a structured appeal.

It identifies the specific policy language at issue, cites the relevant Florida statutes, presents the medical evidence in chronological order, and requests a written response to each point.
File a complaint with the Florida Division of Consumer Services
If the internal appeal produces another denial, the next step is a formal complaint with the Florida Division of Consumer Services, the agency that regulates coverage companies operating in the state.
Regulators don’t resolve individual disputes, but a documented complaint creates external pressure and an official record, both of which matter if the case moves toward litigation.
Evaluate legal action for bad faith or breach of contract
When a company denies a valid claim without adequate investigation, ignores evidence, or misapplies policy language it was legally required to follow, it may have acted in bad faith.
Under Florida Statute 624.155, a pet lawyer will assess whether the denial involved a genuine dispute over interpretation or whether the company ignored its own obligations under Florida law. Those are two different situations with different remedies, and only one of them is a dead end.
A decision, not a verdict
If your pet coverage claim was denied and the explanation didn’t sit right, the first thing to do is have someone read the denial against your policy and against Florida law. That review costs you nothing and tells you exactly where you stand.
Veterinary expenses don’t get smaller, so acting early is always the right move regardless of what you decide to do next.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. How long do I have to appeal a pet insurance denial in Florida?
Appeal windows vary by company, but most insurers require a written appeal within 60 to 90 days of the denial date. Florida law does not set a specific deadline for internal appeals, but the statutory deadline for legal action on a written contract is five years under Florida Statute.
2. What does it mean that the burden of proof is on the insurer?
The company must prove the exclusion applies, not the other way around. That means the company needs documented clinical evidence connecting the past condition to your current claim, not just a general reference to old veterinary records.
3. Can a denial be overturned if my vet disagrees with the company’s interpretation?
Yes. If the company claims two conditions are clinically related and your vet’s professional opinion is that they are not, that disagreement creates a factual dispute the company must respond to.
4. What qualifies as bad faith by a pet insurance company in Florida?
When the company unreasonably denies a valid claim, delays a decision without cause, fails to conduct a proper investigation, or misrepresents the policy terms to the policyholder.
