US home insurance premiums are set to rise for a fifth straight year in 2026 as insurers grapple with losses from extreme weather and high rebuilding costs.
The average annual premium is
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The forecasts are in line with other recent estimates. A report released Tuesday by Lending Tree, an online mortgage comparison site,
There is a growing body of research connecting extreme weather, exacerbated by climate change, to insurance price increases. A US Treasury Department analysis of more that 243 million home policies, released in January 2025,
No hurricane made landfall in the US in 2025, but Matt Brannon of Insurify pointed to the toll from severe convective storms, which can produce tornadoes, hail and destructive winds. Insured losses from such storms have exceeded
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Those events have hit the middle of the country especially hard. In 2025, premiums jumped by more than 20% in six states, including Minnesota (+34%), Colorado (+33%), Nebraska (+25%) and Oklahoma (+24%). Florida remains by far the most expensive state to buy homeowners insurance, with the average premium set to approach $8,500, more than double the national average.
Insurify expects the biggest price increases this year in California, following the devastation caused by the Los Angeles wildfires.
Rising costs are forcing households to make difficult choices. More than half of homeowners surveyed by Insurify said they made financial sacrifices to afford coverage and nearly three in 10 said they would drop coverage altogether if they could.