Climate change? Inflation? Why Illinois home insurance rates are up 30% since 2015
As natural disasters become more extreme and more frequent due to climate change, some states are seeing higher home insurance rates, and
While weather definitely plays a part, experts say other factors like inflation, state regulation and home replacement costs are also adding fuel to the fire. Looking ahead, insurance companies are striving to support building more resilient homes to prepare for the effects of global warming.
Since 2015, home insurance premiums in
"One of the hard things about pricing insurance for property is the volatility of it because of the weather," Hosfield said. "Generally, [companies] look at their past results to find what they expect the cost of insuring a home could be over time, over an average year. That's how they come up with your premium, but it's hard to come up with that average year when in some cases you're dealing with once-in-100-year type of catastrophic events."
Hosfield said
"We have to look at what climate change is doing, and insurance companies have to plan for that, but they've also been paying out a lot in claims. The costs of repairing homes and automobiles and rebuilding property – those costs are increasing, and that's what's adding to the increase in the cost of insurance."
Insurance companies use a type of analysis called catastrophe modeling to predict what could happen to a home in the future, but that model becomes more complex with climate change in the mix.
"In a lot of cases now, when you hear a one-in-100-year flood or storm, that measurement is no longer really accurate," Hosfield said. "It is still an infrequent event, but it's more frequent than it used to be."
The long-term effects of climate change on the home insurance industry is yet to be seen. With some insurers like
There is precedent of insurance providers pulling back coverage: In the 1960s, most private companies stopped insuring flooding, leading the federal government to create the National Flood Insurance Program in 1968.
"I think the good news is, before the issues hit,
Hosfield added that insurers are taking steps to plan for sustainability through research and policy work.
"It's not like the industry is just standing back, waiting to try and raise rates," he said. "They are actually also trying to mitigate that risk to try to keep rates down by making houses more sustainable."
A customer of
"I understand passing [the cost] on to everybody, but this is the worst it's ever been, and I've owned a home for 35 or 36 years," she said.
The
"I've had friends that have gone to a different insurance company, and they lowball it for that year, but then the next year, they raise it so you're kind of right back where you started from," she said. "You're in a Catch-22. If I move, what's it gonna be the following year?"
That means the hurricanes in
"Those prices are globally based and have risen due to rising natural disaster losses," McChristian said in an email. "But in
McChristian added that rising home replacement costs are another large share of why rates are going up.
"We have to look at what climate change is doing, and insurance companies have to plan for that, but they've also been paying out a lot in claims," she said. "The costs of repairing homes and automobiles and rebuilding property – those costs are increasing, and that's what's adding to the increase in the cost of insurance. We can't say climate change is causing the prices to go up, but insurance is going up because of the other costs associated with helping people get back to the pre-loss condition."
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