Utahns with low credit take a bath on home insurance
Utahns with low credit scores can expect to pay nearly $1,500 more annually on average for home insurance compared to those with high scores, a new analysis finds. Why it matters: Credit scores aren’t necessarily indicative of somebody’s ability to pay their bills — and tying them to insurance prices can disadvantage low-income and minority homeowners, among others. Driving the…
This article is available to Insider Pro subscribers only.Sign in or register to be an Insider Pro and access ALL LOCKED articles.
LETTERS: Honor our ancestors, clean up Evergreen Cemetery
Taylor County farmer sentenced to federal prison for crop insurance fraud
Advisor News
- Retirement Reimagined: This generation says it’s no time to slow down
- The Conversation Gap: Clients tuning out on advisor health care discussions
- Wall Street executives warn Trump: Stop attacking the Fed and credit card industry
- Americans have ambitious financial resolutions for 2026
- FSI announces 2026 board of directors and executive committee members
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- Retirees drive demand for pension-like income amid $4T savings gap
- Reframing lifetime income as an essential part of retirement planning
- Integrity adds further scale with blockbuster acquisition of AIMCOR
- MetLife Declares First Quarter 2026 Common Stock Dividend
- Using annuities as a legacy tool: The ROP feature
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- How to appeal a Medicare coverage denial
- The Conversation Gap: Clients tuning out on advisor health care discussions
- 2026 NAIC COMMITTEE LEADERS WILL ADVANCE WORK ON KEY ISSUES
- MEDICAID MAKES $289 MILLION IN "UNALLOWABLE PAYMENTS" TO INSURE "DECEASED ENROLLEES"
- Long-term care insurance can be blessing
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News