You probably don’t have the right insurance to cover what Ian did to homes in Florida [Miami Herald]
Florida’s homeowners shell out thousands, even tens of thousands, for property insurance to protect themselves from fierce storms like Hurricane Ian.
But tens of thousands of people walloped by the Category 4 storm in September are now discovering that they didn’t have the coverage they needed for one of the biggest impacts of the storm — flood insurance.
It’s one of the hardest — and most expensive — lessons from hurricane season 2022, which officially draws to a close Wednesday.
Florida’s home insurance market has been troubled for decades, but experts worry that the back-to-back strikes from hurricanes Ian and
And even if they do, coverage for Florida’s most common risk — flooding — won’t be on the table for discussion.
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Flood insurance is almost entirely run by the federal government, which sets strict rules and price caps on who needs to have it and how much it costs. Experts say that despite the government’s efforts to make flood insurance cheap and available,
By one estimate, flood damage could make up half of the total Hurricane Ian losses in
But it was the slow creep north through the rest of the state, when the much weaker storm dumped more than a foot of rain, that shocked inland residents.
Low-lying areas quickly flooded, leaving some apartment complexes with an entire story underwater. Officials had to rescue more than a hundred residents trapped in their homes and cars.
And when the floodwaters eventually receded, many Floridians in the path of Ian — and then
Only about 18% of homes in
Compare
“People just expect to be protected and it’s very distressing and upsetting for them to find out they paid the premiums and don’t have the coverage they need,” said
Few home insurance policies cover flood damage. Instead, almost all flood insurance policies in the nation are through the
An early estimate by CoreLogic, a property information and analytics firm, suggested that half of the flood damage
“We saw more damage outside those zones than in,” Larsen said. “It doesn’t take much water to cause a lot of damage.”
How much damage did the hurricanes do?
Florida’s
Initial estimates from
Florida’s relatively small private flood insurance market, with just under 100,000 policies as of late 2021, also took a hit.
“Ian will be our largest claim event after Ida last year,” he said. “Having them year after year is consequential.”
For Hurricane Nicole, Florida’s total property losses are slimmer but still significant at just under
What does flood insurance cover?
For the lucky few that had the proper insurance to match their hurricane-borne flood damage, there’s cash from
As of mid-November,
The picture is worse for those without flood insurance.
“An inch of water in your house can easily be a
Uninsured people will have to raid their savings or hope for help from charities or state and county grants. Federal grants are not an option.
Flood insurance numbers dropping
Yet despite the growing risk of flooding — which Watkins says is the most common disaster facing Floridians — the Sunshine State has fewer and fewer residents with flood insurance every year.
Burgess, with Neptune, said his firm produced data showing that 18% of
“That’s going in the wrong direction. We need many many more people to buy flood insurance to be protected from this peril,” he said.
That’s a tough sell in
The biggest reason is likely that flood insurance, unlike property insurance, isn’t mandatory for most homes. Any home purchased with a mortgage is required to have property insurance, but mortgage-purchased homes are only required to have flood insurance if they’re within a designated
And even then, research shows that many of the properties required by their lenders to hold flood insurance policies drop them with no consequences.
A recent revamp of the federal flood program, known as Risk Rating 2.0, aims to get more people insured at market rate premiums, a move that could help the NFIP dig itself out of its
Feds roll out new flood insurance rates. 1 million in
For
“Floods, in general, are becoming more frequent, both inland and on the coast, because of sea level rise and intense rainstorms,” he said. “The NFIP has the opportunity to be a linchpin in the
Average flood insurance premiums are around
“People don’t want to pay more money to buy more coverage that they don’t have now,” Watkins said. “But you don’t find out you need it until it’s too late.”
©2022 Miami Herald. Visit miamiherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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