Why insurance companies are pulling out of California and Florida, and how to fix some of the underlying problems
When the nation's No. 1 and No. 4 property and casualty insurance companies –
Insurers have been retreating from high-risk, high-loss markets for years after catastrophic events. Hurricane Andrew's unprecedented
I co-direct the
Reinsurers are worried
Insurance is a vehicle to transfer risk. When an individual buys an insurance policy, that person pays to transfer the risk of expensive repairs to the insurer if the home is damaged by a covered event, like a fire or thunderstorm. Most policyholders don't experience major disasters, so insurance companies make money.
However, disasters are extremely costly when they do occur, so insurers also buy their own insurance, called reinsurance.
Reinsurance costs have been rising fast in response to expensive disasters around the world in recent years. Reinsurers' risk-adjusted property-catastrophe prices rose 33% on average at their
If prices are too high and insurers can no longer transfer excessive risk to the reinsurance market, they are stuck "holding the risk" – meaning the cost of claims when disasters strike. A big enough disaster can put insurance companies out of business, or they can decide to leave the state, as seen in
Responsible insurers are not in the business of gambling, so they do what
Why drop
only
So, why did
The answer can only be speculative since
One is state insurance regulations that can limit premium increases, prohibit policy cancellations and require certain levels of coverage. Insurer Chubb's chief executive mentioned restrictions that left it unable to charge "an adequate price for the risk" as part of the reason for its 2022 decision to not renew policies for expensive homes in high-risk areas of
What happens now?
When insurers pull out of a community, residents and companies without access to property and casualty insurance are left holding their own risk – and paying the price if a disaster strikes. From a societal and political perspective, that's a problem.
Residents and businesses without insurance tend to recover more slowly. Uninsured residents often depend on donations, loans or federal individual assistance. The latter, however, is only available for catastrophic disasters and covers only immediate needs.
To fill the gap and provide access to insurance, states including
Residents covered by these options transfer their risk to the state, such as in
Similarly, anyone purchasing flood insurance through the National Flood Insurance Program since 1968 is transferring their risk to federal taxpayers. The NFIP currently insures almost
Politicians are not catastrophe risk experts, though, and do not make decisions based on data alone.
In the short term, I expect that insurance pools, as well as federal- and state-run insurers of last resort, will add more policies, and that state legislators will incentivize the return of insurers. But while the political willingness to support such a trend exists, the financial resources do not.
The National Flood Insurance Program has plenty of lessons to teach about the challenges of balancing exposure and keeping premiums affordable: It is more than
Fixing insurance starts with the property itself
Despite the risk of properties becoming uninsurable, communities today continue to permit development in floodplains, along coastlines and in the wildfire-prone wildland urban interface. Inadequate building codes allow developers to build homes that cannot withstand severe weather. These practices have placed millions of residents and the things they value in harm's way.



Florida’s home insurance rates rising faster than any state, nearly triple U.S. average [Miami Herald]
Florida's Citizens Property Insurance eyes rate hike
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