Michigan Department of Insurance and Financial Services

The Michigan Department of Insurance and Financial Services (DIFS) serves as the primary state regulatory authority for insurance products, banking institutions, credit unions, mortgage lending, and securities activity conducted within Michigan. DIFS operates under the executive branch and derives its statutory authority from the Michigan Insurance Code (MCL 500), among other enabling acts. The department's regulatory scope touches millions of Michigan consumers and thousands of licensed entities operating in the state's financial services sector.

Definition and scope

DIFS is a cabinet-level department of Michigan's executive branch, established under the authority of the Director of Insurance and Financial Services — a position appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Michigan Senate. The department functions as the consolidated supervisory agency for:

DIFS licenses entities and individuals operating in these sectors across all 83 Michigan counties. The department also administers the Michigan No-Fault Auto Insurance Reform (Public Act 21 of 2019), which restructured personal injury protection (PIP) benefit tiers and introduced a medical fee schedule for auto-related treatment.

Scope limitations: DIFS jurisdiction is confined to Michigan-chartered or Michigan-licensed entities and persons conducting business with Michigan residents. Federally chartered national banks supervised by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and federally chartered credit unions supervised by the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) fall outside DIFS primary examination authority, though state consumer protection statutes may still apply. Entities operating exclusively outside Michigan, and insurance products sold in other states to non-Michigan residents, are not covered by DIFS regulatory actions.

More detail on how DIFS fits within the broader framework of Michigan's executive structure is available on the Michigan Government Authority index.

How it works

DIFS exercises regulatory authority through four primary mechanisms:

  1. Licensing and registration — Before conducting regulated business in Michigan, insurers must obtain a Certificate of Authority, while insurance agents and brokers must hold individual licenses under MCL 500.1200 et seq.. Financial service providers follow parallel licensing requirements under their respective enabling statutes.

  2. Market conduct and financial examinations — DIFS examiners conduct periodic financial solvency reviews and market conduct examinations of licensed entities to assess compliance with Michigan statutes and rules. Examination schedules and protocols align with standards published by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC).

  3. Rate and form filing review — Insurers must file policy forms and rate schedules with DIFS for review before use. Auto insurance rate changes, in particular, require department approval under the prior-approval system established in the Michigan Insurance Code.

  4. Consumer complaint investigation and enforcement — DIFS receives, investigates, and resolves consumer complaints against licensees. Enforcement actions range from compliance orders and fines to license revocation. Civil monetary penalties for insurance code violations can reach $500 per violation or $2,500 per wilful violation under MCL 500.150.

DIFS coordinates with the NAIC on multi-state licensing through the National Insurance Producer Registry (NIPR) and participates in the NAIC's Interstate Insurance Product Regulation Compact for certain life and annuity products.

Common scenarios

Auto insurance disputes under No-Fault: Michigan's no-fault system, restructured by Public Act 21 of 2019, generates a significant volume of DIFS consumer complaints. Common issues include disputes over PIP benefit tier elections, medical fee schedule reimbursement rates, and claims handling timelines. DIFS investigates insurer compliance with the 30-day claim acknowledgment and 60-day payment deadlines established under MCL 500.3142.

Mortgage licensing complaints: Consumers alleging predatory lending, improper fee disclosure, or unlicensed mortgage activity may file complaints with DIFS. The department has authority to order restitution and impose administrative penalties against mortgage licensees under the Mortgage Brokers, Lenders, and Servicers Licensing Act.

Bank and credit union supervision vs. federal oversight: A state-chartered bank supervised by DIFS differs from a federally chartered national bank supervised by the OCC. DIFS examiners have direct access to state-chartered institution records; for national banks, coordination occurs through formal inter-agency channels. Consumers dealing with a national bank who file a DIFS complaint may be redirected to the OCC or Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).

Securities fraud referrals: DIFS securities division investigates unregistered securities offerings and investment adviser fraud targeting Michigan residents. Cases meeting criminal thresholds are referred to the Michigan Attorney General's office for prosecution.

Decision boundaries

DIFS authority has defined boundaries that determine which regulatory path applies:

Situation DIFS Authority Alternative Authority
State-chartered bank examination Yes — primary examiner FDIC (backup federal)
National bank examination No — not primary OCC (primary federal)
State-chartered credit union Yes — primary examiner NCUA (backup federal)
Federally chartered credit union No NCUA (primary federal)
Insurance rate approval (prior approval state) Yes — all admitted carriers NAIC coordination for multi-state
Surplus lines insurer compliance Limited — tax and eligibility State of domicile primary
ERISA-governed employer health plan No — federal preemption U.S. Department of Labor

Employer-sponsored health benefit plans governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) represent the most significant category explicitly outside DIFS jurisdiction. Self-insured employer plans fall under federal Department of Labor oversight, not state insurance regulation — a distinction that affects approximately 60 percent of privately insured Americans, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation Employer Health Benefits Survey 2023.

References