State Farm seeks 22% rate hike for California homeowners to cover Los Angeles wildfire losses
On Monday, the company sent a letter requesting the
The insurer, which had previously issued warnings about its financial stability, said the increases are necessary to ensure it can continue to pay out claims after covering more than
“Insurance will cost more for customers in
It was unclear how much premiums could increase in the
In a statement, the insurance department said it planned to review State Farm’s request “thoroughly to ensure Californians are charged the appropriate justified rates,” adding it will “respond with urgency and transparency” with proposals to protect the state’s insurance market.
Citing growing wildfire risks due to climate change and rising rebuilding costs, among other factors,
Over the past decade, insurers have also dropped hundreds of thousands of property owners in fire-risk parts of the state, forcing many onto the FAIR Plan, California’s expensive insurer of last resort. The cancellations came even as companies raised premiums statewide.
State Farm’s plea to regulators follows a 30% rate hike request in June. At the time, the company asked the insurance department to grant a “variance” to raise premiums higher than usual due to the company’s uncertain financial outlook.
With that request still pending, the company is now asking regulators to approve a smaller “interim” hike as soon as possible to help cover losses in the
Under the FAIR Plan, a state-mandated, privately run high-risk pool, losses that exceed its resources must be covered the state’s insurance carriers in proportion to their market share.
The company added that without the increase, its
Consumer advocates, meanwhile, are skeptical that
“It seems like they’re are trying to take advantage of this tragedy by pushing a bailout onto homeowners,” said
In an attempt to stabilize California’s faltering home insurance market, state regulators recently finalized a plan that includes allowing insurers to raise rates based on the growing threat of climate change — long an industry demand — in exchange for expanding coverage in parts of the state with the greatest wildfire risk.
In the greater
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