State Farm launched a forceful public defense Monday after California regulators released findings from an investigation into the company’s handling of claims following the 2025 Los Angeles wildfires, calling the state’s actions a “reckless, politically motivated attack” and threatening consequences for California’s already strained homeowners insurance market.
The California Department of Insurance investigation found 398 violations of state law across 114 of the 220 sample claims it reviewed. Among the key findings: claims were not investigated or resolved within required timelines, payouts were unreasonably low, and policyholders were frequently reassigned to different adjusters, a practice some described as “adjuster roulette.” California is now seeking financial penalties that could represent the largest ever pursued following a wildfire disaster this century. If violations are confirmed, penalties could reach $5,000 per violation or $10,000 if found to be willful. The state is also seeking a suspension of State Farm’s license, and the legal filing will proceed to a public hearing before an administrative law judge.
State Farm, which insures more than one million homes in California and handled more than 13,700 auto and homeowners claims tied to the Los Angeles fires, rejected the characterization outright. “We reject any suggestion that State Farm engaged in a general practice of mishandling or intentionally underpaying wildfire claims,” the company said in a statement issued the same day. The insurer argued that most of the issues identified were administrative or procedural in nature, such as late notices or documentation gaps, rather than failures to pay covered claims. It noted that additional payments identified through the review amounted to approximately $40,000 against a backdrop of more than $5.7 billion already paid to customers, with total payments expected to reach $7 billion as claims and rebuilds continue.
The company defended the scale of its response, saying more than 1,000 employees deployed to Los Angeles after the fires, with more than 200 still on the ground. State Farm also argued that California’s regulatory environment bears responsibility for the broader instability in the state’s insurance market. “The Department’s approach is adding uncertainty to a market that already lacks predictability, discouraging participation and leaving Californians with fewer coverage options when they need them most,” the company said.
State Farm policyholders filed roughly 11,300 residential claims tied to the Los Angeles fires, representing nearly one-third of the 38,000 claims submitted across all insurers. California officials have said the violations uncovered suggest thousands of survivors may have been affected.



