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Rising Homeowners Insurance Rates

Jan 13, 2012 12:30:00 AM

Notice an increase in your homeowners insurance premium? While it doesn’t make it any easier, it’s important to know you’re not alone. Most homeowners insurance companies across the nation are increasing the price they charge to protect your home and its contents. 

Why, you ask? In a word: weather. Just in the period between April and June of 2011, catastrophic weather events caused $15 billion in property damage across the nation, making the second quarter of 2011 the most-expensive second quarter on record for catastrophe-related weather losses. 

Consider this volatile weather recap from 2011:

  • During the first half of 2011, wind and hail caused over 20,000 National Weather Service severe weather reports.
  • Ice and snow pounded many areas of the country in late winter. The 2011 Groundhog Day blizzard affected a huge chunk of the nation from the Gulf states to the Great Lakes region and continued all the way up the East Coast into the Northeast.
  • Severe tornado outbreaks in the spring of this year affected many areas of the country, notably in Joplin, Missouri, and Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
  • Wildfires in Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, fueled by drought conditions, destroyed thousands of homes during the year.  
  • Hurricane Irene, which formed in August in the tropics, made landfall in North Carolina, Connecticut, New Jersey, and New York and caused record losses. 
  • Earthquakes in various places have occurred in areas not normally thought of as earthquake-prone, most recently in Oklahoma and Virginia.

Catastrophic weather events drive up the demand for labor and materials, which in turn increases reconstruction and repair costs. So while market value (the price your home is worth on the market) in many areas of the country is declining, the replacement cost (the amount you need to insure your home to be fully protected) continues to rise.

While weather events are out of your control, there are some steps you can take to lower your premium:

  • Increase your deductible
  • Inform us of newly installed alarm systems, roof or other major improvements, and if you’ve recently paid off your mortgage – all can lead to premium discounts

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Gibson

Written by Gibson

Gibson is a team of risk management and employee benefits professionals with a passion for helping leaders look beyond what others see and get to the proactive side of insurance. As an employee-owned company, Gibson is driven by close relationships with their clients, employees, and the communities they serve. The first Gibson office opened in 1933 in Northern Indiana, and as the company’s reach grew, so did their team. Today, Gibson serves clients across the country from offices in Arizona, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Utah.