Washington · Bad Faith

Washington IFCA notices as a market signal.

Washington State is one of a small number of jurisdictions with a statutory bad-faith framework that generates a public, structured dataset of carrier conduct notices before litigation begins. The Insurance Fair Conduct Act (RCW 48.30.015) requires insureds to file pre-suit notice with the Washington Office of the Insurance Commissioner (OIC) before bringing a first-party bad-faith action. In aggregate, those filings are a real-time market signal on carrier behavior that plaintiff-side coverage attorneys have barely begun to use.

What the IFCA notice requires

Washington’s Insurance Fair Conduct Act, enacted in 2007, created a private right of action for insureds whose claims are unreasonably denied or delayed in violation of the duty of good faith. The statute imposes enhanced remedies, including up to treble damages and attorney’s fees, making it a potent tool for bad-faith claims.

To trigger those remedies, an insured must provide 20 days’ advance written notice to the insurer and to the OIC before filing suit under IFCA. The notice must describe the basis for the alleged violation. If the insurer remedies the violation within the 20-day period, the enhanced remedies are not available.

The OIC receives and maintains these pre-suit notices. As with Florida’s Civil Remedy Notice, the notice itself is a structured, standardized filing that identifies the carrier, the policy line, and the nature of the alleged violation. Because the OIC is a public agency, those filings are available under Washington’s public records law.

The dataset in aggregate

The IFCA notice database tracks bad-faith claim allegations in Washington across all lines of business where first-party coverage is implicated. Assembled across carriers and analyzed over time, it reveals behavioral patterns that are invisible at the level of any individual claim. These are patterns that plaintiff-side coverage attorneys have never had systematic access to.

The specific signals DAIS surfaces from the IFCA record, and how they translate into carrier propensity intelligence, are part of what Founding Members receive. What matters here is the foundation: a real-time public dataset on carrier conduct, assembled at scale for the first time for the attorneys who represent policyholders, real people whose claims were wrongfully denied or delayed by insurers who counted on them not having this information.

Comparing FL and WA: structural similarities

Washington’s IFCA framework is structurally analogous to Florida’s §624.155 Civil Remedy Notice system (pre-suit notice, cure period, public filing with the insurance regulator) but with meaningful differences. Florida’s CRN framework covers a broader range of alleged violations under the Unfair Insurance Trade Practices Act and generates substantially higher notice volumes, reflecting Florida’s larger residential insurance market and its history with property-damage claims. Washington’s IFCA framework is more targeted, covering unreasonable denial or delay specifically, and generates a more concentrated signal.

For carriers operating in both states, comparing their CRN profile in Florida to their IFCA notice profile in Washington provides a cross-market read on conduct patterns that is more informative than either dataset alone. A carrier that appears elevated in both jurisdictions, in the same line, is showing a pattern that is not jurisdiction-specific.

Washington’s IFCA framework creates a pre-litigation public record on carrier conduct similar to Florida’s CRN system. Read in aggregate across both jurisdictions, the combined dataset reveals carrier behavior patterns with multi-state corroboration.

Using IFCA data in practice

For plaintiff attorneys handling coverage disputes in Washington, the IFCA notice record provides context that individual claim experience cannot. Before filing a notice, knowing the carrier’s aggregate IFCA history helps calibrate expectations about whether the carrier is likely to remedy within 20 days, and what that remedy posture implies for settlement strategy if litigation proceeds.

The IFCA record also has evidentiary implications. Washington courts have recognized that a carrier’s course of conduct across claims is relevant to reasonableness analysis in bad-faith litigation. Aggregate data derived from public-record filings is not individualized claims data; it does not disclose specific claimants or claim decisions. It documents carrier behavior at the market level in a form that can inform expert analysis and litigation strategy.

The public-record baseline

The IFCA notice database, like Florida’s CRN database, is public by operation of law. What turns a public database into market intelligence is the assembly and analysis, work that requires advanced AI and engineering infrastructure that most plaintiff practices have no reason to build in-house. DAIS has built it, specifically for the attorneys who represent policyholders whose claims were wrongfully denied.

That is what DAIS’s Carrier Intelligence product delivers for Washington: the IFCA notice record assembled, analyzed, and presented as aggregate carrier propensity intelligence for plaintiff bad-faith attorneys. Combined with the Florida CRN layer, coverage spans both states where construction-coverage disputes concentrate. For an overview of DAIS’s approach, see the Methodology page.

Carrier Intelligence, Florida and Washington.

DAIS assembles IFCA notice patterns and CRN data into aggregate carrier propensity intelligence for plaintiff coverage attorneys in Florida and Washington. Access for Founding Members is limited and by request.

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