Surplus Lines Compliance in Louisiana: Filing Requirements, Tax Rates & Document Automation
Surplus lines compliance in Louisiana: 5% premium tax, hurricane exposure, offshore energy operations, coastal property risk. Regure automates Louisiana insurance document workflows.
Surplus Lines in Louisiana: The Essentials
Louisiana (LA) maintains a self-reporting model for surplus lines compliance. The state levies a 5% surplus lines premium tax on all non-admitted placements, collected and remitted directly to the Louisiana Department of Insurance.
The primary regulator is the Louisiana Department of Insurance. Eligible surplus lines insurers must appear on the state's approved list, maintained at https://www.ldi.la.gov. All Louisiana surplus lines brokers must hold a valid state surplus lines license.
Diligent Search Requirements
Before placing coverage in the non-admitted market, Louisiana brokers must conduct a diligent search of the admitted market. Specifically, three admitted insurer declinations required. These declinations must be documented and retained as evidence of compliance with the diligent search requirement.
The Nonadmitted and Reinsurance Reform Act (NRRA) of 2010 streamlines multi-state placements for US-domiciled risks. Under NRRA, only the home state of the insured — Louisiana in this case — receives surplus lines tax, eliminating the need to file in every state where exposure exists. This simplification applies to non-commercial risks and most commercial risks that are not Large-Risk Exempt placements.
Louisiana Surplus Lines Filing Requirements
Louisiana Revised Statutes § 22:441 et seq. govern surplus lines. Louisiana's coastal exposure, offshore energy operations, and post-Katrina market hardening mean a substantial portion of Gulf Coast property is placed in the non-admitted market. The 5% premium tax applies to all surplus lines transactions.
Self-Reporting to the Louisiana Department of Insurance
Louisiana does not use a dedicated stamping organization. Instead, surplus lines brokers file reports directly with the Louisiana Department of Insurance. Filing intervals and required data elements are specified in Louisiana's surplus lines statutes. Brokers must maintain complete records of each placement, including diligent search documentation, for at least five years.
Premium Tax Calculation and Remittance
The Louisiana surplus lines premium tax rate is 5% of gross premium. This applies to the entire premium charged, including endorsements and policy fees where applicable. Brokers are responsible for collecting the tax from the insured and remitting to the Louisiana Department of Insurance.
For multi-state risks, the NRRA home state rule means Louisiana collects 100% of the surplus lines tax for policies where the primary insured is domiciled in Louisiana — regardless of where the exposures are located. Conversely, Louisiana brokers placing risks for policyholders domiciled in other states owe those states' tax rates.
Louisiana Insurance Market Profile
Louisiana's hurricane and flood exposure makes it one of the most challenging property markets, with significant surplus lines reliance post-Katrina.
The non-admitted market serves a critical function in Louisiana's insurance ecosystem, providing capacity for risks that admitted carriers decline — whether due to unusual risk characteristics, market capacity constraints, or specialized coverage requirements not available in standard forms. A healthy surplus lines market ensures that Louisiana businesses and individuals can obtain coverage even for the most challenging risks.
Document Compliance Requirements for Louisiana Surplus Lines
Louisiana surplus lines operations must maintain comprehensive records for each placement, including:
- Signed declinations from admitted insurers (or documented evidence of unavailability)
- The placement slip or binder showing the insurer, premium, and coverage terms
- The diligent search affidavit (required in most states)
- The premium tax calculation worksheet
- Filing confirmation from the Louisiana Department of Insurance
- The surplus lines disclosure provided to the insured (required by statute)
- All policy endorsements and amendments during the policy period
These records must be retained for a minimum of five years (some states require longer) and must be available for regulatory examination on request.
How Regure Automates Louisiana Surplus Lines Compliance
Regure provides insurance operations teams with automated document management built for Louisiana's regulatory requirements:
- Filing deadline tracking: Automated alerts for Louisiana Department of Insurance filing deadlines, preventing late filing penalties
- Document completeness checking: Validates that all required documents are present before filing submission, flagging missing declinations or unsigned affidavits
- Premium tax calculation: Applies 5% rate automatically to gross premium, including endorsements and fee adjustments
- Audit trail generation: Creates immutable records of every document received, action taken, and filing submitted — ready for Louisiana Department of Insurance examination
- Retention management: Enforces retention schedules appropriate for Louisiana requirements, with litigation hold capabilities for disputed placements
Ready to bring Louisiana surplus lines operations into automated compliance? Book a demonstration to see Regure's compliance automation in action, or explore our full US state compliance guide for all 50 states.
Ready to modernize your claims operations?
Book a 20-minute demo and see how Regure automates the manual work holding back your team.