California homeowners insurance market tested as fires rage
January 9, 2025
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Raging wildfires in Southern California are an early, high-stakes test of new regulations designed to shore up the state’s spiraling homeowners insurance market.
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Rules that aim to lure insurers back to the fire-prone state were finalized by the state’s insurance commissioner in December and take effect this month. The regulations allow the companies to consider climate change risks when setting rates. Over time, insurers will also have to increase their coverage offerings to high-risk areas.
The changes are an effort to align California’s insurance rules closer with other states and stem a statewide crisis that’s deepened as climate change increases the frequency and intensity of wildfires and other natural disasters.
That’s on grim display now as five wildfires have burned through 29,000 acres across Los Angeles and surrounding areas gripped by a months-long drought. Nearly 180,000 people remain under evacuation orders, and the fires already rank as the most destructive in the city’s history.
“It’s unprecedented, and it’s unbelievable how many fires we actually have going on,” Karl Susman, president of Susman Insurance Services, told Yahoo Finance on Wednesday. “There are literally fires in almost every corner of Southern California.”
Read more: What does homeowners insurance cover?
Southern California’s fires illustrate why insurers have been fleeing in recent years.
January isn’t typical wildfire season in the state, but a drier climate has extended the risks into the colder months. The blazes have ripped through wealthy neighborhoods of Los Angeles, including Pacific Palisades where the median home price is $3.5 million.
Insurers will likely be on the hook for a large percentage of what’s lost.
Facing mounting losses from paying out California claims, insurance giants, including Allstate, State Farm, and Farmers, have either pulled out of the state entirely in recent years or limited the new policies they’ll write. The exodus left millions of residents scrambling to find alternative coverage in a shrinking market.
It also prompted the new rules taking effect this month, which, in addition to allowing underwriters to account for climate change risks, also let insurance companies pass on the cost of reinsurance to consumers. That’s the insurance that insurers buy to spread their own risk. All other states already allow reinsurance costs to be reflected in consumers’ premiums.
Because the new regulations mean many Californians will see higher premiums, they have drawn ire from some consumer groups. But experts say such increases are needed as the planet warms and natural disasters mount.
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