The nation's homeowners filed fewer insurance claims this summer, but the average costs of them could soar to new heights.
The 1,070,614
Claims severity also averaged $16,755, a slight respite from the third quarters of the prior two years. Verisk however cautions that after a maturation period, in which high-value claims are processed, the figure could rise up between $17,258 to $18,431, which would be one of the highest-severity quarters in recent memory.
Rising reconstruction costs, including materials and labor, are a factor for the rise, the report said. The findings add to woes for homeowners who are spending well into double-digits
The numbers behind the homeowners insurance "paradox"
Verisk, which describes the diverging claims and cost figures as a paradox, said the number of claims over the summer was down 28.5% from the year prior. There was a 95% decrease in hurricane claims from last year's third quarter, and a 57% decline in tornado damage claims.
Wind and hail accounted for 51% of all combined claims, including a massive spike in Wyoming following a hailstorm in August. The majority of claims, or 29.9%, were made for water losses, followed by 22.1% for hail and 16.2% for wind damages.
Residential reconstruction costs rose 3.52% from last October, with labor costs rising 4.49% over the same time, according to Verisk. Labor rose faster than materials, which rose 2.19% in the past 12 months, while lumber, which was
The analytics company also noted the impact of the
Permits for new residential properties meanwhile are also down 8.16% from a year ago, and fell 0.85% in the prior three months, the report found. Homebuilder sentiment has remained low all year, and those companies and their mortgage arms have offered