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Residential Insurance Prices Increase as Insurers Slow Business in California

Joseph Thomas was surprised to receive a notice from his homeowner’s association (HOA) this spring letting him know that there would be an increase in insurance premiums for him and other condominium owners at The Met in Los Angeles’ San Fernando Valley. The letter stated the increase was due to instability in California’s property insurance market. This left Thomas feeling perplexed.

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California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara. Official portrait
California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara. Official portrait.

By McKenzie Jackson
California Black Media

Joseph Thomas was surprised to receive a notice from his homeowner’s association (HOA) this spring letting him know that there would be an increase in insurance premiums for him and other condominium owners at The Met in Los Angeles’ San Fernando Valley.

The letter stated the increase was due to instability in California’s property insurance market. This left Thomas feeling perplexed.

“They said the premium was going up because it was hard to get insurance in California now, and a lot of companies are leaving,” he recalled. “I started Googling because I didn’t believe it. I thought they were robbing us of our money, but I Googled it. It is a thing.”

The withdrawal of large insurance carriers like Allstate and State Farm from California’s insurance market will have a significant impact on claims, at least one claims services provider has told insurance businesses, said Maurice Arnold of Robert Arnold and Company in Oakland.

Remaining carriers must shoulder huge catastrophic risks in the state, which often sees enormous claims from wildfire damage. We can expect insurance carriers to respond by tightening their underwriting and raising premiums. When lots of companies pull out of the market, it puts pressure on exiting companies to try to offset risk with tighter underwriting and increase premiums, Arnold said.

Giant insurance companies are refusing to offer or renew coverage for homes and residential complexes across the state due to the looming threat of wildfires, natural disasters, inflation, and other factors and, as they claim, their ability to get adequate rates to pay for these increased costs.

Since 2020, the state has experienced eight disaster events resulting in overall claims ranging from $20 billion to $50 billion. This has caused an increase in pressure from insurance companies to tighten California’s consumer-friendly policies that have held down rates for years.

California Rental Housing Association (CalRHA) Executive Director Russell Lowery said insurance premium costs have jumped up millions of dollars for property owners in his group.

“With insurers leaving the market that means our members don’t get as competitive of a quote,” he noted.

Lowery said rising insurance prices hit renters’ pockets also.

“Extraordinary increases,” he noted. “The pressure on property owners to pay that cost in the form of higher rent is very real.”

California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara has taken steps to make insurance more affordable for Californians. The steps include expanding FAIR Plan coverage options and requiring insurance companies to acknowledge and reward wildfire safety and mitigation efforts made by property owners. The commissioner is also in ongoing discussions with insurers to address their rate increase requests.

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Oakland Post: Week of November 13 – 19, 2024

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