Full-Time
Posted on 9/4/2025
Insurance brokerage offering commercial, employee benefits
No salary listed
Salt Lake City, UT, USA
In Person
Leavitt Group is a privately held insurance broker with 250+ local offices across 28 states. It offers commercial and personal insurance and group employee benefits, plus risk-management guidance. Local agency owners assess client needs, quote from multiple carriers, and tailor coverage and benefits, combining local service with national carrier relationships and underwriting resources. Its goal is to provide effective risk management and benefits solutions through trusted local agents and the strength of a nationwide network.
Company Size
1,001-5,000
Company Stage
N/A
Total Funding
N/A
Headquarters
Cedar City, Utah
Founded
1952
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Health Insurance
Dental Insurance
Vision Insurance
401(k) Company Match
Paid Vacation
Paid Sick Leave
Paid Holidays
Health Savings Account/Flexible Spending Account
Wellness Program
Company-paid Life Insurance
Leavitt Group, a national insurance brokerage, has acquired majority co-ownership of FBMC Benefits Management, a $30 million employee benefits agency based in Tallahassee, Florida. The deal expands Leavitt Group's employee benefits capabilities across the United States. Founded in 1976, FBMC specialises in employee benefits for private and public sector clients. David Faulkenberry will continue as CEO, whilst Rick Farris has been elevated to president. Both will serve as agency co-owners. Leavitt Group's co-ownership model allows local agency leaders to retain ownership whilst accessing national resources and operational support. The acquisition aligns with the company's strategy to grow through both acquisitions and organic expansion. Kevin Callister, Leavitt Group's chief affiliations officer, said the partnership demonstrates the company's ability to attract large operations whilst maintaining local presence and culture.
Case corner - Leavitt Recreation & Hospitality Insurance, inc. v. Florida Caverns R.V. Resort, LLC. Court: Florida First district court of appeal case nos.: 1D2023-2119 (fees), 1D2023-3022 (merits) - consolidated for disposition date: july 30, 2025 lower court: circuit court for Jackson county; judge ana maria garcia parties: appellant on merits / appellee on fees - Florida Caverns R.V. Resort, LLC, d/b/a Florida Caverns R.V. Resort at merritt's mill pond | appellee on merits / appellant on fees - Leavitt Recreation & Hospitality Insurance, inc. counsel (Leavitt): jorge L. Cruz-Bustillo, michele A. Lo presti (chartwell law, miami); albert J. Wollerman, todd J. Sanders (chartwell law, tallahassee) counsel (Florida Caverns): jennifer A. Winegardner, Michael rayboun, elmer C. Ignacio (rayboun winegardner, PLLC, tallahassee) panel: KELSEY, J. (opinion); NORDBY and LONG, JJ., concurring on dismissal of the fees appeal. Florida Caverns owns and operates an RV park whose business depends on utility hook-up towers ("power stations"/pedestals) for electricity, water, sewer, and (in some sites) cable/Wi-Fi. In September 2018, after acquiring the park out of bankruptcy, owner Erwin Jackson worked with Leavitt Recreation & Hospitality Insurance (a broker specializing in RV parks) to place commercial property coverage. Jackson says he provided site maps showing 200+ serviced sites and requested coverage sufficient to protect the physical premises (not just business income). A policy effective October 5, 2018 issued under the "RV Park and Campground Application." It did not expressly list power-station coverage (or its exclusion). On October 10, 2018, Hurricane Michael struck, causing extensive pedestal damage. Leavitt emailed that the policy "may not have included" coverage for utility pedestals, and the insurer denied that portion of the claim. Florida Caverns sued Leavitt for negligent failure to procure appropriate coverage, alleging a request for comprehensive premises protection that (by industry custom and past dealings) should have included power stations. Florida Caverns itemized $1,097,516.40 in direct power-station repair/rebuild costs (201 stations) and later obtained coverage (with another agency/insurer) that did include pedestal protection. Leavitt answered with 26 affirmative defenses, admitting that the measure of damages in negligent-procurement is what would have been covered if obtained, and admitting that power-station coverage was available - while asserting Florida Caverns declined it to save premiums and/or should have noticed the omission post-issuance. Trial court. The circuit court granted summary judgment for Leavitt on the merits, reasoning Florida Caverns failed to produce an actual, pre-Michael policy that expressly covered power-station damage to prove availability. In a separate order, the court denied Leavitt's proposal-for-settlement fees as ambiguous. First DCA's decision. Merits (Case No. 23-3022) - Reversed The First DCA held Florida Caverns did not need to produce a pre-loss policy expressly covering power stations at summary judgment. The record already contained competent evidence of availability, including: * The broker's own agent testifying that power-station coverage was available under the very policy program at issue and that he discussed it with the owner (Leavitt says the owner declined to avoid added premium; the owner denies ever declining). * The owner's testimony about industry custom, prior coverage for a different park, and post-loss placement including pedestals. Florida Caverns' theory is classic negligent procurement: if coverage was available and a reasonably prudent broker should have obtained or clearly warned it was missing, the broker can be liable for the difference between what should have been covered and what was. The court cited Florida law recognizing broker liability where an agent fails to procure requested coverage or fails to inform the insured that requested coverage was not obtained. The First DCA distinguished the broker's cases (e.g., Capelle, Mondesir, Gelsomino), noting those turned on deficits at trial after full discovery, not at the summary-judgment stage with ongoing discovery - and none involved an admission from the agent that the very coverage was available. Here, disputed facts (who said what; whether coverage was requested/declined; custom; damages) precluded summary judgment. Holding: Summary judgment for Leavitt reversed; case remanded for further proceedings on the merits. Fees (Case No. 23-2119) - Dismissed as premature Because the merits judgment was reversed, Leavitt's appeal of the order denying fees under | 768.79/R. 1.442 was not ripe. Dismissed. Why this case matters. * No "silver-bullet policy" required at summary judgment. To show availability, plaintiffs can rely on agent admissions, industry custom, prior/post placements, and deposition testimony - especially where discovery is ongoing. * Broker duties are practical, not paper-only. If a client reasonably requests comprehensive premises coverage, a specialist broker must meet the request or clearly warn what's missing. Silence can be actionable. * Measure of damages is counterfactual coverage. In negligent procurement, damages equal what the insured would have recovered but for the broker's failure - key for large infrastructure items (like RV park pedestals). Related reading on boltz legal (approved links). Today's insight. "The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience."
For the fourth year in a row, the Leavitt Group of Northern Arizona, also known as Butler-Leavitt Insurance Agency, has received the Agency Excellence Award.
Leavitt Group has again been named one of the "Best Companies to Work For" by Utah Business in the extra-large (2,500+ employees) category.
For its property and casualty solutions, Portalus, a for-profit subsidiary of the Washington Technology Industry Association (WTIA) and a leading provider of workforce and business solutions for technology companies, has entered into a strategic partnership with Leavitt Group Northwest after the national brokerage acquired the line of business.