It looks like the US house insurance market is going to record highs this year. These are dire predictions. By the end of 2024, the average yearly premium will be $2,522. This is an increase of 6% compared to the previous year, according to insurance comparison website Insurify. Furthermore, there has been a 20% increase over the previous two years. This data is being used to calculate the 2024 increase.
One of the main causes of this have been an increase in natural disasters, as well as Insurers leaving particular areas which reduces competition and higher expenses for house repairs.
Many Americans are finding it more and more difficult to buy home insurance due to rising premiums. As a result, others choose to forgo coverage completely. However, some states are in a considerably worse situation than others.
In areas that are vulnerable to natural disasters, average yearly premiums might increase to $12,000 this year.
Florida
In general, home insurance prices are expected to increase by 6% in 2024. In states experiencing extreme weather, they may climb by up to 23%. Thirty percent of Americans are uneasy about this. There’s considerable reasoning to be anxious, considering that homeowners in Florida already pay more than four times the national average for their home insurance.

The early predictions of an extremely busy Atlantic hurricane season in 2024 could result in even higher rates in 2025, a prospect that no one in Florida wants to hear about. The “explosive” hurricane season predicted by AccuWeather has the potential to surpass the record of 30 named storms in a single season.
United States & Florida
Florida homeowners now pay the highest insurance premiums in the US in 2023. The average rate paid by Americans for home insurance was $2,377. This is significantly less than the average rate paid by homeowners in Florida, which was $10,996.
Despite a 19.8% increase in prices between 2021 and 2023, homeowners in Florida pay the highest premiums for insurance, with an average yearly premium of $10,996 in 2023.
Insurify projects that costs will increase by an additional 7% to $11,759 in 2024. Florida is home to six of the ten most expensive cities in the US for homeowners’ insurance.
Fifty percent of homeowners do not have special flood insurance, and thirteen percent mistakenly thought that their regular policy did.
New Orleans Homeowner
Alfredo Herrera’s alternatives for coverage are limited and insurance costs are increasing as a result of the collapse of the New Orleans house insurance market. Herrera works at a nearby bank as a financial employee.
In 2020, he paid $270,000 for his 900-square-foot house in the Mid-City area of New Orleans, where he currently resides with his partner. He paid $1,600 a year for house insurance in 2022. However, his insurance terminated his policy in July of last year, citing its departure from Louisiana.
In the past, acquiring or keeping homeowners’ insurance didn’t present much of a problem. Herrera looked about for a different strategy, but he had trouble locating a policy. It was out of the question for Louisiana citizens to go to the state’s insurer. It was a last resort for property owners. Every year, it would have cost more than $7,000.
In the end, Herrera discovered a policy with a state-based small business that cost him $4,930 a year, a 208% increase over what he had been paying in 2022. He stated, “It’s a very difficult situation.” When he bought his house, he had no idea that the last-resort insurer would be so costly and that his options for private insurance would be so restricted.
Precise Pricing
However, efforts to ensure more accurate and equitable pricing are limited. Governments must work more to implement climate mitigation policies and provide support for retrofitting, including for flooding, subsidence, storm damage, and heat stress, if they want to ensure that insurance rates in high-risk areas remain under control. Regulation can guarantee that newly constructed properties are situated in less hazardous places and adhere to stronger building requirements.
Governments will have to assume more of the risks themselves or citizens will have to pay higher premiums in the absence of quicker and more comprehensive action on the effects of climate change at the national and international levels. Both results are unsustainable.
Written By Chiquita Street
Sources:
DailyMail – US home insurance bills to hit $2,500-a-year in 2024 due to climate change but as much as $12,000 in worst-hit areas – how much will it be in YOUR state?
CNN – The home insurance market is crumbling. These owners are paying the price
News-Press – Florida tops US for home insurance rates. What’s ahead as ‘explosive’ hurricane season nears
Financial Times – The painful rise in home insurance costs
Top & Featured Image Courtesy of Chris Potter‘s Flickr Page – Creative Commons License
Inset Image Courtesy of Phillip Pessar’s Flickr Page – Creative Commons License


















