A Private Client Advisory on the SCE Wildfire Recovery Compensation Program
As 2025 draws to a close, the financial landscape for Southern California businesses and property owners has been fundamentally altered by the Eaton Fire. Beyond the immediate physical destruction, a new strategic challenge has emerged: Southern California Edison (SCE) has launched the Wildfire Recovery Compensation Program, offering expedited payouts to victims.
For the high-net-worth business owner or property holder, this is not merely an insurance matter—it is a high-stakes decision in capital preservation. Accepting a settlement provides immediate liquidity but requires a total release of SCE from future liability. Conversely, pursuing litigation could yield significantly higher returns but carries years of legal uncertainty.
I. The Current Landscape: SCE Liability and the “Fast Pay” Offer
While SCE has not officially admitted fault, the U.S. Department of Justice recently filed a lawsuit against the utility, alleging that faulty power infrastructure sparked the blaze in January 2025. Furthermore, SCE has already detected a “fault” on one of its transmission lines at the time of ignition.
The SCE Compensation Program at a Glance:
- The “Fast Pay” Track: Offers a settlement within 90 days of a completed claim.
- The “Detailed Review” Track: A more involved process for complex claims that can take up to 9 months.
- The Legal Waiver: Accepting any payment through this program requires you to sign a legal waiver that waives all future legal rights, including potential future health claims.
Strategic Note: Critics and survivor networks have noted that SCE’s formula may not offer full pre-fire market value, with some flat-fee offers (such as $10,000 for smoke/ash damage) potentially representing only a fraction of the actual restoration costs.
II. Strategic Analysis: To Settle or to Sue?
Deciding whether to accept the settlement is a calculation of Net Present Value (NPV) versus the potential for a larger, yet delayed, Future Legal Recovery.
A. When the Settlement Makes Strategic Sense
- Liquidity Requirements: If your business requires immediate cash to resume operations or prevent a total collapse.
- Reduced Overhead: SCE adds a 10% premium to net damages specifically to help cover legal costs if you are represented by counsel during the claim process.
- Guaranteed “Premium”: The program offers a “Direct Claim Premium” (e.g., $200,000 for resident homeowners who lost their homes) that SCE claims is only available through this voluntary program, not through litigation.
B. When Litigation is the Superior Path
- Substantial Economic Loss: For commercial properties with high-value business interruption claims that the standard SCE formula (based on 2022–2024 averages) might significantly undervalue.
- Non-Economic Damages: While the SCE program includes non-economic loss, a jury in a negligence trial may value “pain and suffering” or “loss of life” much more highly than the standardized rates in the fund.
- Full Market Value: If your property has unique characteristics or appreciation that a standardized “independent” valuation model (like the one SCE is using) fails to capture.
III. Recourse If You Decline the Offer
If you reject the SCE offer, your legal standing remains intact. In California, you have primary avenues for recovery through the court system:
- Inverse Condemnation: You sue SCE for property damage. Under California law, if a utility’s equipment caused the fire, they can be held strictly liable for the “fair market value” of the loss, plus attorney fees.
- Negligence Lawsuits: You join a coordinated legal action to prove SCE failed in its duty of care (e.g., failure to maintain brush or power down wires during red-flag periods). This allows for recovery of business interruption, emotional distress, and personal injury.
- Future Trial Dates: It is important to note that the first set of lawsuits against SCE are currently not set to go to trial until early 2027.
Strategic Action: Don’t Sign Away Your Rights Prematurely
The Eaton Fire settlement is a complex financial instrument. Before signing a release that forever bars you from further recovery, a comprehensive audit of your total economic loss—both direct and consequential—is required.
Our advisory team can help you model the potential outcomes of litigation versus the immediate settlement to ensure your family’s wealth and your business’s future are not being undervalued for the sake of speed.
Schedule a confidential, year-end strategic review to evaluate your claim options before the November 30, 2026, submission deadline.
About Arrache Private Client
Arrache Private Client (Arrache PC) serves as the strategic “Wealth Architect” for Southern California’s high-net-worth community. We specialize in the intersection of Private Client Real Estate, Corporate Strategy, and Tax Optimization. In the wake of regional disasters like the Eaton Fire, we provide the sophisticated analysis necessary to protect assets and navigate complex recovery frameworks.

About the Author
Michael R. Arrache, CPA & Realtor®
As a Certified Public Accountant (CPA), Enrolled Agent (EA), and licensed Realtor®, I am a tax expert who works closely with small business owners and real estate investors. My firm, Arrache Private Client, provides a range of specialized tax strategy, wealth preservation, and legacy planning for for real estate and business owners. With over 15 years of experience, my mission is to help clients achieve their financial and business goals by providing strategic advice and tailored solutions. I write these articles to serve as a starting point to guide you through the business or real estate process, and I am committed to providing the strategic guidance you need to help preserve and grow your wealth.

