Agency Transfer: Difference between revisions

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A Policy Transfer is the opposite of a Policy Assignment.
A Policy Transfer is the opposite of a Policy Assignment.


Rather than changing only the policyholder due to a transfer of ownership in the property, an [[NFIP Policy Transfer]] keeps the same policyholder but changes the WYO carrier, the agent, and the policy number. These are only allowed during the renewal of the policy, as the transfer policy will take the place of the renewal policy term from the current carrier.
Rather than changing only the policyholder due to a transfer of ownership in the property, an [[NFIP Policy Transfer]] keeps the same policyholder but changes the WYO carrier, the agent, and the policy number. Policy Transfers are only allowed during the renewal of the policy, as the transfer policy will take the place of the renewal policy term from the current carrier.


=== Rollover ===
=== Rollover ===

Revision as of 16:12, 25 February 2025

Due to the manner in which NFIP policies are issued and managed, specific protocols must be followed when policies are being transferred between agencies or agents. Failure to understand and follow these protocols may cause unnecessary work and cost when managing your NFIP policies.

Policy Assignment
An agency transfer is different than transferring policies between policyholders, which is known as policy assignment. The tables below compare Policy Assignment only for the purpose of differentiation.
1. Policy Assignment 2. Policy Transfer 3. Rollover 4. Agency Transfer
Current Any Change? Current Any Change? Current Any Change? Current Any Change?
Policy Same Policy New Policy New Policy Same
Carrier Same Carrier New Carrier New Carrier Same
Agent Same Agent New Agent Same Agent New
Insured New Insured Same Insured Same Insured Same
1. Policy Assignment 2. Policy Transfer 3. Rollover 4. Agency Transfer
When Mid-term When RENEWAL When RENEWAL When See below

Policy Assignment

The NFIP allows policies to be assigned from the current policyholders to new policyholders as part of a transfer of ownership. In other words, if the current policyholders are deeding their property, and by extension their insurable interest in that property, then they can give ownership of the NFIP policy as well. This is known as Policy Assignment.

In section 1 of the table above, the Carrier, Policy, and Agency all stay the same; only the policyholder changes (as shown in green).

Policy Transfer

A Policy Transfer is the opposite of a Policy Assignment.

Rather than changing only the policyholder due to a transfer of ownership in the property, an NFIP Policy Transfer keeps the same policyholder but changes the WYO carrier, the agent, and the policy number. Policy Transfers are only allowed during the renewal of the policy, as the transfer policy will take the place of the renewal policy term from the current carrier.

Rollover

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Agency Transfer

What is it?

What is the process?

What is the process?

AOR Form

what needs to be signed?


This page contains information about the NFIP. Find more NFIP Resources.