State Farm, California's largest home insurer, said Thursday it will offer renewals to all of its 250,000 L.A. County residential policyholders slated to have been dropped, not just those in fire rava
State Farm, the largest homeowners insurance company in California, jolted residents last year by announcing it would not renew 30,000 policies. That included about 8,100 homeowners in communities ravaged by the current wildfires, state officials said.
About 1,600 policies in Pacific Palisades were dropped by State Farm in July, California Department of Insurance spokesman Michael Soller said in an Thursday email to CBS MoneyWatch. An analysis ...
State Farm often runs commercials during NFL games, but the insurance company won’t have an ad presence during Super Bowl 2025 in the wake of the fires that have devastated the Los Angeles
The Super Bowl commercial would have been the second consecutive spot from the insurance giant, after Arnold Schwarzenegger played 'Agent State Farm' in last year's game.
The insurance company canceled thousands of California homeowners' insurance policies last year in an attempt to avoid "financial failure."
State Farm is canceling a planned commercial by the insurance giant set to run during the 2025 Super Bowl next month, citing the impact of the Los Angeles area wildfires .
Since the wildfires broke out in early January, State Farm’s claims department has fielded over 7,400 home and auto claims, State Farm said.
LOS ANGELES - State Farm, one of the largest insurers in California, announced Wednesday it will offer policy renewals to homeowners impacted by the wildfires that erupted in the Los Angeles area last week, following previous plans to drop coverage.
State Farm, long a stalwart of Super Bowl advertising, announced it was pulling an ad from next month's big game.
Insurance giant State Farm has canceled a Super Bowl ad that was set to air during the big game in February — in part, it said, over the raging wildfires in California. “Our focus is firmly on providing support to the people of Los Angeles.
People who’ve lost their homes have faced yearslong battles to recover payouts as insurers deal with a surge in claims arising from more destructive wildfires.