Fast Loss. Slow Payments. High Interest Exposure.
Fire claims move differently.
The damage is immediate. The disruption is total.
But the insurance process? It slows down fast.
Investigations begin. Documentation expands. Payments come in stages.
And while everything else feels urgent, the claim timeline stretches—sometimes far beyond what Texas law allows.
That delay isn’t neutral.
It creates statutory interest exposure.
Why Fire & Smoke Claims Are So Complex
Unlike storm claims, fire losses trigger deeper scrutiny from carriers.
What Makes These Claims Different
- Cause-and-origin investigations
- Coverage verification and exclusions
- Personal property inventory requirements
- Structural and smoke damage overlap
- Temporary housing (ALE) considerations
- Contractor estimates evolving over time
This creates a claim that’s not just large—it’s layered.
The 60-Day Rule Still Applies
Even with investigations and documentation:
Once the carrier has what it reasonably needs, they have 60 days to pay.
Not after every question is answered.
Not after every internal review finishes.
Just 60 days.
If that deadline is missed, interest begins accruing on unpaid amounts.
Interest Rates for Fire & Smoke Claims
Fire claims typically fall under standard Texas prompt payment rules.
Rate Overview
| Claim Type | Interest Rate |
| Fire & smoke claims | 18% per year (simple interest) |
| Accrual | Daily, from missed deadline |
| Duration | Until payment is made in full |
That rate is fixed—and powerful.
Where Delays Usually Happen
Fire claims rarely involve a single payment. That’s where timelines become critical.
1. Investigation Phase Delays
- Cause-and-origin reports take weeks or months
- Carrier waits on third-party experts
- Payment decisions stall
2. Initial Payment Gaps
- Partial payment issued
- Structure vs. contents split
- Large portions of the claim remain unpaid
3. Personal Property Inventory Delays
- Policyholder submits detailed item list
- Carrier reviews and depreciates values
- Disputes slow payment timelines
4. Supplement & Scope Changes
- Hidden structural damage uncovered
- Smoke contamination expands scope
- Code upgrades required
Each supplement creates a new evaluation timeline.
5. Additional Living Expenses (ALE)
- Ongoing reimbursement requests
- Carrier delays or questions documentation
- Payments occur over extended periods
Even these payments can be subject to timing rules.
Supplements: A Major Factor in Fire Claims
Fire damage doesn’t stop at what’s visible.
Common Fire Claim Supplements
- Structural damage discovered during demolition
- Smoke infiltration beyond initial scope
- HVAC system contamination
- Electrical and wiring damage
- Code compliance upgrades
- Water damage from firefighting efforts
Each supplement:
- Triggers a new review
- Starts a new 60-day clock
- Can generate its own interest if delayed
Partial Payments Don’t Stop Interest
One of the biggest misconceptions:
“They already paid something, so the timeline resets.”
It doesn’t.
What Actually Happens
- Initial payment is made
- Additional amounts are owed later
- Interest applies to the difference between what was paid and what should have been paid
That gap is where recovery lives.
Real Claim Flow
Fire claims often unfold like this:
| Stage | What Happens | Interest Impact |
| Claim Filed | Investigation begins | Clock starts |
| Initial Payment | Partial and delayed | Interest begins if late |
| Inventory Submitted | Contents evaluation slows | Timeline continues |
| Supplement Filed | Additional damage identified | New clock starts |
| Supplement Paid Late | Delayed approval | Additional interest accrues |
| Final Payment | Claim closes months later | Total interest calculated |
Multiple phases. Multiple timelines. And multiple interest periods.
What We Analyze
At Enforce Interest, we break fire claims down into measurable components.
Our Review Includes
- Date of loss and claim filing
- Investigation timeline
- Documentation submission points
- All payments (structure, contents, ALE)
- Supplement timelines
- Underpayments vs. final totals
We reconstruct the full claim history.
Then we calculate where the delays occurred—and what they’re worth.
Signs You May Be Owed Interest
If your fire or smoke claim involved any of the following, it’s worth reviewing:
- Payment took longer than 60 days
- You received multiple payments over time
- Your personal property claim was delayed
- Supplements were required during repairs
- Final payment came months after the loss
- You had ongoing ALE reimbursements
These are common.
And they often involve missed interest.
Why It Often Goes Unnoticed
After a fire, the priority is rebuilding.
You focus on:
- Securing the property
- Replacing belongings
- Getting back to normal
By the time the claim ends, the timeline is secondary.
But legally, it’s not.
How We Help
We turn a complicated fire claim into a clear financial analysis.
What You Get
- A structured claim timeline
- Identification of missed deadlines
- Interest calculations across all phases
- A clear recovery path
No assumptions. Just documented, timeline-based calculations.
Final Thought
Fire claims are intense.
They start fast—but they don’t finish that way.
The longer the process takes, the more opportunity there is for missed deadlines—and unpaid interest.
Most policyholders never calculate it.
Most carriers don’t offer it.
Enforce Interest makes sure it doesn’t get overlooked.
Because in fire and smoke claims, the damage is immediate—
but the cost of delay builds over time.