Editorial: Are Illinoisans paying more for insurance due to California and Florida disasters? More transparency, please.
Total insured losses from the horrific
Meanwhile, Allstate, the second largest insurer of homes in
This hefty increase is just the latest in a relentless series of hikes that has jacked the cost of homeowners coverage for the average Allstate customer by well over
An average policy priced at
Allstate isn’t alone, of course.
What do the increasing frequency of natural disasters in
Allstate and other insurers routinely say their pricing in one state reflects the risks they shoulder in that state alone and not what happens in places far more prone to Mother Nature’s wrath.
But let’s just say there’s healthy public skepticism about that claim.
In other parts of the country, like
By contrast,
By and large, that system has served
When it comes to threats to our homes,
Nationwide, Allstate’s cost to cover wind and hailstorm events (outside of hurricanes and tornadoes) soared to more than
All of this is to say there’s evidence to support higher homeowners insurance costs in
There are rumblings in
We don’t think
When raising prices, the
Like utilities and health care, car and home insurance aren’t optional for almost all consumers. We just saw how price inflation for everyday goods affected the outcome of a presidential election. One way to address understandable anger at these seemingly relentless insurance rate hikes is to reassure the public in black and white that there’s good reason this necessary protection is costing so much.
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