Property and casualty insurers are often referred to as P&C companies within the industry. Property and casualty insurance is a broad label for various types of insurance products, such as homeowner and auto insurance, that are generally purchased to protect property and cover liability for injuries and damages caused to others.
Property and casualty companies
Property and casualty companies doing business in our state must be admitted, file financial reports, pay premium taxes, make rate and form filings and report certain types of data.
Resources for your organization
- Find premium tax instructions, due dates, and schedules for property and casualty companies registered in Washington, including domestic and foreign companies.
- Find premium tax instructions, due dates, and schedules for property and casualty companies registered in Washington, including domestic and foreign companies.
- Find premium tax instructions, due dates, and schedules for property and casualty companies registered in Washington, including domestic and foreign companies.
- Find premium tax instructions, due dates, and schedules for property and casualty companies registered in Washington, including domestic and foreign companies.
- Find premium tax instructions, due dates, and schedules for property and casualty companies registered in Washington, including domestic and foreign companies.
- Find premium tax instructions, due dates, and schedules for property and casualty companies registered in Washington, including domestic and foreign companies.
- Learn the different parts of the anti-fraud plan that insurers are required to submit to our office.
- Find guidance and requirements for filing a biographical affidavit, also known as Form 11.
- What you owe for fraud and regulatory surcharges depends on your organization's type and the premiums you reported on last year's tax form.
- Learn what property and casualty insurers must file as part of their annual financial information filing requirements.
- MCAS filings are submitted through the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC), not to individual states.
- Learn about the rate and form filing requirements for property and casualty companies.
- Get information about how property and casualty, life, disability and title companies can apply for admission to do business in Washington state.
- Speed to market tools provide guidance to help insurance companies expedite the review of their filings.
- Insurers and producers are required to notify our office when security breaches occur that involve private consumer information (i.e., Social Security numbers, etc.).
- Learn about the guidelines for properly submitting your SERFF filings in Washington state.
- If you're a property and casualty insurer, there are thresholds for when and how you need to report data on your lines of business.
- TRIA was initially created as a temporary three-year federal program, allowing the federal government to share monetary losses with insurers on commercial property/casualty losses due to a terrorist attack.