Bad faith insurance refers to an insurer treating a policyholder unfairly or dishonestly when handling a claim, going beyond an honest disagreement to violate its duty to deal with you fairly. It is one of the most important consumer-protection concepts in insurance.
Key takeaways
- Every insurance contract carries an implied duty of good faith and fair dealing.
- Bad faith is unreasonable, dishonest, or unfair claim handling, not an honest dispute.
- Examples include unjustified denials, failing to investigate, or unexplained delays.
- Insurers can legitimately deny claims that genuinely are not covered.
- Keeping records and filing a complaint with your state regulator are key first steps.
The duty of good faith
Every insurance contract carries an implied duty of good faith and fair dealing. This means the insurer is obligated to treat you fairly, not just to follow the literal words of the policy.
In practice, the insurer must:
- Handle your claim honestly.
- Investigate it reasonably before deciding.
- Avoid putting its own interests unfairly ahead of yours.
This duty is the standard against which an insurer's conduct is measured when a claim goes wrong.
What bad faith can look like
Bad faith is about how a claim is handled, not just the outcome. Conduct that is often cited as bad faith includes:
- Unreasonably denying a valid claim.
- Failing to investigate before reaching a decision.
- Ignoring communications from the policyholder.
- Offering far less than a claim is worth without justification.
- Unexplained delays in paying a covered claim.
The common thread is unfairness or dishonesty in the process, not simply a result you dislike.
Bad faith versus an honest dispute
It is important to separate bad faith from a legitimate disagreement, because not every denial is bad faith.
| Honest dispute | Possible bad faith |
|---|---|
| Denial based on a genuine coverage question | Denial with no reasonable basis |
| Reasonable investigation, different conclusion | Refusal to investigate at all |
| Clear, written explanation of the decision | Silence, evasion, or no explanation |
Insurers are allowed to deny claims that genuinely are not covered. Bad faith is about unreasonable, dishonest, or unfair conduct, not a good-faith disagreement over what the policy covers.
What you can do
If you believe a claim is being handled unfairly, several steps can help protect your position.
- Keep thorough records of every call, email, and letter.
- Ask for written explanations of any decision.
- Appeal internally through the insurer's process.
- File a complaint with your state department of insurance.
- For serious cases, consider seeking legal advice.
Clear, organized documentation strengthens any review of how your claim was handled.
Why it matters
The possibility of accountability for bad faith is part of what keeps claim handling fair across the industry. Knowing that unfair conduct can carry consequences gives insurers a strong reason to investigate honestly and pay valid claims.
For you as a policyholder, understanding the concept means you can recognize when handling has crossed a line and know where to turn if it does.
Frequently asked questions
What counts as bad faith by an insurer?
Bad faith is unreasonable, dishonest, or unfair claim handling, such as denying a valid claim without basis, failing to investigate, ignoring you, or delaying payment without explanation. An honest coverage dispute is not bad faith.
Is every denied claim an act of bad faith?
No. Insurers can legitimately deny claims that genuinely are not covered. Bad faith is about unfair or dishonest conduct in handling the claim, not the denial itself.
What should I do if I think my insurer acted in bad faith?
Keep thorough records, request written explanations, appeal internally, and file a complaint with your state department of insurance. Serious situations may warrant legal advice.
This guide is general education, not insurance advice. Confirm specifics with a licensed agent or your state department of insurance.
- NAIC — Unfair claims practices and consumer protection — Official Guidance · retrieved May 31, 2026