Home Insurance The hurricane tax: What climate change means for your homeowners insurance rates In coastal states where hurricanes are a real risk, hurricane coverage carries a separate, higher deductible — and a much higher premium that's reshaping what Americans pay to insure their homes. View Carriers Please enter valid zip Compare top carriers in your area Written by Maryalene LaPonsieMaryalene LaPonsieStaff WriterMaryalene LaPonsie is a staff writer for Insure.com. She has 25 years of professional writing experience. She specializes in personal finance -- insurance, investing and retirement. | Reviewed by Nupur GambhirNupur GambhirEditor-in-ChiefNupur Gambhir is the editor-in-chief of Insure.com and a licensed life, health and disability insurance agent in New York with seven years of experience covering insurance. Her expertise has been featured in Bloomberg News, Forbes Advisor, CNET, Fortune, Slate, Real Simple, Lifehacker, The Balance, The Financial Gym and MSN. She holds a BA in Economics from The Ohio State University.VIEW FULL PROFILESee moreSee less | Posted onMay 7, 2026 Why you can trust Insure.com Quality Verified At Insure.com, we are committed to providing the timely, accurate and expert information consumers need to make smart insurance decisions. All our content is written and reviewed by industry professionals and insurance experts. Our team carefully vets our rate data to ensure we only provide reliable and up-to-date insurance pricing. We follow the highest editorial standards. Our content is based solely on objective research and data gathering. We maintain strict editorial independence to ensure unbiased coverage of the insurance industry. Snowbirds may be lured to Florida by the promise of warm weather, but they could get more than snow-free winters if they buy a second home in the Sunshine State. Their new property might come with an insurance premium more than double what they pay back home. NOAA is forecasting another above-normal Atlantic hurricane season in 2026 — and for homeowners in coastal states, that translates almost directly into higher insurance premiums. The extra cost of insuring a home against named-storm damage already adds more than $4,500 a year to the average Florida premium — $7,136 with hurricane coverage vs. $2,557 without. A more active season could lead to larger insurer losses, more expensive reinsurance, and higher homeowners insurance rates in 2026 and beyond. What is a hurricane deductible — and why does it exist? A hurricane deductible is a separate deductible that applies when damage is caused by a named storm or hurricane recognized by an official source, such as the National Weather Service. Hurricane deductibles are typically applied as percentages, such as 2%, 5% or 10%, although a flat deductible may be available to some homeowners. The deductible is a percentage of the dwelling coverage on the policy, not the cost of the loss. A hurricane deductible doesn’t apply to regular wind or rain events. The policy’s regular deductible applies in those situations. Nineteen states have hurricane or named storm deductible provisions in place, according to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. First introduced after the catastrophic losses of Hurricane Andrew in 1992, the adoption of these deductibles expanded after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. “You’re dealing with a lot of total losses (after a major hurricane),” says Chris Bacon, chief operating officer of Openly, which provides home insurance in 24 states. “You’re not dealing with houses that are moderately damaged.” Those losses mean billions are paid out by insurers — $65 billion after Katrina, for instance–– and hurricane deductibles were implemented to offset these losses. They’re intended to keep coverage affordable and accessible to homeowners, and there’s no sign they’ll be going away. “Insurers have generally been raising hurricane deductibles over the last few years,” according to Jasper Cooper, vice president and senior credit officer with Moody’s Ratings. How climate change is recalculating your risk — and your homeowners insurance rate The last 11 years have been the warmest on record, according to the World Meteorological Organization. Across the country, homeowners insurance premiums rose 24% between 2021 and 2024 — twice the rate of inflation — according to a 2025 report from the Consumer Federation of America. Climate change is putting more homes at risk of extreme weather and affecting home insurance rates in the following ways: Warmer ocean waters are linked to more intense storms, such as Category 4 and 5 hurricanes As sea levels rise, more homes are at risk of damage from storm surges Climate change is linked to slower-moving storms, which can cause more damage Insurance companies have exited states such as Louisiana and Florida, which are prone to destructive storms, leaving homeowners with fewer options and more expensive premiums Reinsurance – which protects insurance companies from catastrophic losses – has become more expensive because of climate change-related losses, and insurers pass this cost on to customers How your home upgrades could pay lower your premium New pricing technology means insurers can reward individual risk reduction — not just lump you in with the whole neighborhood. Hurricane mitigation features that may lower your premium include: Impact-resistant windows and doors Reinforced or hurricane-rated roof Storm shutters Roof-to-wall connections (hurricane straps) “You are seeing more carriers that are being more sophisticated,” Bacon says. “The more sophisticated the pricing models are, the more accurately you can price the (risk).” That means insurers can set premiums that better reflect the chances of your home sustaining damage. If your home has been hardened to withstand a hurricane, ask your insurer for a wind mitigation inspection to see if you qualify for discounts. How much does hurricane coverage add to your home insurance premium? In some parts of coastal states like Florida, Louisiana, and Texas, hurricane damage isn’t covered by a standard homeowners policy, though coverage depends on where you live — in lower-risk parts of the same state, hurricane damage may already be included. To get that protection, homeowners have to add the coverage with a separate hurricane deductible — usually 2% of their home’s insured value — which significantly raises their annual premium. The numbers below reflect average premiums with that 2% hurricane deductible added, since that’s the realistic cost of being covered for hurricane damage in these states. Florida homeowners pay more than anyone else in the country. With a 2% hurricane deductible, the average Florida premium is $7,136 a year — more than ten times what a homeowner in Hawaii pays ($659), where hurricane damage isn’t covered at all. These figures are based on a standard policy with $300,000 in dwelling coverage, $300,000 in liability coverage, and a $1,000 all-perils deductible. The “hurricane tax”: How much adding hurricane coverage really costs In states where hurricane damage is excluded from a standard policy, adding hurricane coverage can dramatically increase your annual premium. Florida and Louisiana show the clearest “hurricane tax” pattern — premiums jump by roughly $4,500 a year with hurricane coverage and a 2% deductible. In other coastal states like Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia, premiums actually decrease slightly when a 2% hurricane deductible is added, because hurricane damage is included in a standard policy in those states, and the higher deductible just shifts more risk onto the homeowner. The table below shows the full picture across these states. StateWithout hurricane coverageWith coverage, 2% hurricane deductibleAnnual increaseFlorida$2,557$7,136+$4,579Louisiana$1,458$5,986+$4,528Alabama$3,970$3,633-$337Mississippi$2,862$2,529-$333Georgia$2,617$2,323-$294 Powered by: Which states have hurricane or named-storm deductibles? Most are coastal states along the Gulf or Atlantic, but a few, like Pennsylvania, sit further inland — they’re included because hurricanes can travel well past the coast. States with hurricane or named-storm deductibles: Gulf Coast: Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas Atlantic Coast: Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Virginia Inland with storm-track exposure: Pennsylvania Pacific: Hawaii Plus: District of Columbia Why other states don’t have hurricane deductibles States outside this list either don’t face meaningful hurricane risk or already cover hurricane damage under their standard windstorm-and-hail coverage. Inland states like Kansas, Oklahoma, and Colorado see hail and tornado damage rather than named storms, and they typically have their own separate wind and hail or windstorm deductibles to handle those risks. States in the Mountain West and Pacific Northwest face wildfire and earthquake risks instead, which carry their own coverage rules. Hurricane deductibles only show up where hurricane risk is significant enough to justify a separate, higher deductible — and where state regulators have approved their use. What’s the difference between a hurricane deductible and a named-storm deductible? A hurricane deductible only applies when the National Weather Service or National Hurricane Center officially classifies a storm as a hurricane — meaning sustained winds of 74 mph or more. A named-storm deductible covers a broader category: it applies to any storm the NWS has named, including tropical storms (39+ mph winds), tropical cyclones, and typhoons. The difference is when the higher deductible kicks in. If a named tropical storm causes $20,000 in roof damage to your home: With a hurricane deductible, the storm wasn’t a hurricane, so your standard all-perils deductible applies (typically $1,000). With a named-storm deductible, the storm was named, so the higher percentage-based deductible applies (often 2% to 5% of your home’s insured value — potentially several thousand dollars). A named-storm deductible always covers hurricanes, since hurricanes are by definition named storms. But a hurricane deductible doesn’t always cover tropical storms. Which one applies to you depends on your state and your specific policy — check your declarations page for the exact wording. The no-deductible option: What’s the tradeoff? Whether you can skip the hurricane deductible — and whether you should — depends on where you live. If you live in a hurricane-prone area, hurricane damage is treated as a separate category, with its own deductible. In others, it’s just lumped in with regular wind damage, the same as a thunderstorm or a tree falling on your roof. Areas where hurricane damage is automatically included. In lower-risk parts of most hurricane-deductible states, a hurricane is treated like any other windstorm — a thunderstorm, a tree on the roof — and falls under your regular all-perils deductible (usually $1,000). Adding a higher hurricane deductible here doesn’t add coverage. It just shifts more of the financial risk onto you in exchange for a small premium discount. Areas where hurricane coverage is only included if you add the deductible. In higher-risk parts of states like Florida and Louisiana, hurricane damage is excluded from a standard policy unless you add a separate hurricane deductible. Skipping that deductible means skipping hurricane coverage entirely. In Florida, for example, the average premium drops from $7,136 a year (with a 2% hurricane deductible) to $2,557 a year without one — a savings of roughly $4,500 annually, but in exchange for zero coverage on named-storm damage. Areas where standard insurers won’t cover hurricane damage at all. In the highest-risk areas — like coastal Texas — homeowners often can’t buy hurricane coverage through a standard policy, no matter what deductible they choose. Coverage has to come from a separate windstorm policy, often through a state-run insurer of last resort like the Texas Windstorm Insurance Association (TWIA). In states without hurricane deductibles at all (like Kansas, Colorado, Vermont, and most inland and Western states), there’s no tradeoff to make. Your homeowners policy uses a single all-perils deductible — typically $1,000 — that applies to every covered loss, including the rare hurricane that travels far enough inland to do damage. Premiums in these states reflect other regional risks like hail, tornadoes, or wildfires, not hurricane exposure. Should you skip or raise your hurricane deductible? Whether to skip, lower, or raise your hurricane deductible comes down to three things: how much risk you’re carrying personally, whether you have a mortgage, and what your state’s rules allow. Use these guidelines as a starting point: If your risk of hurricane damage is low, you don’t have a mortgage, and you have enough savings to cover repairs out of pocket, skipping or raising the hurricane deductible can lower your premium. If you’re in a high-risk area, have limited savings, or own a high-value home, keep hurricane coverage in place at the standard deductible. Before making a decision about a hurricane deductible, be sure you understand your state’s rules and your insurer’s policy details. “There’s a lot of nuance in the policies, and different carriers apply deductibles differently,” Bacon says. Independent insurance brokers can be a valuable resource to help you understand costs and coverage options. How a hurricane deductible works in practice The deductible math can catch homeowners off guard, because it’s based on the home’s insured value — not the size of the claim. Here’s a real-world example: Imagine a home insured for $400,000 with a 2% hurricane deductible. A named hurricane causes $80,000 in roof and water damage. Hurricane deductible (2% of $400,000): $8,000 Insurance payout: $80,000 − $8,000 = $72,000 Out-of-pocket cost to the homeowner: $8,000 If that same home had a standard $1,000 all-perils deductible (because the damage was caused by a regular storm, not a named hurricane), the homeowner would pay $1,000 out of pocket and the insurer would cover $79,000. That’s the trade-off: hurricane deductibles let insurers offer coverage in high-risk areas, but homeowners shoulder a much larger share of the cost when a named storm hits. The higher the percentage you choose, the larger that out-of-pocket cost gets. A 5% deductible on the same $400,000 home would mean $20,000 out of pocket before insurance pays anything. Hurricane coverage doesn’t pay for flood damage — here’s what does Even the best hurricane coverage doesn’t pay for flood damage. Flood coverage is a completely separate product, and homeowners have to buy it on their own. The distinction matters because most hurricane damage is actually water damage. Storm surge pushes ocean water inland, heavy rainfall floods streets and basements, and rivers overflow their banks days after the wind has died down. A home that survives the wind intact can still be destroyed by the water that follows — and without flood insurance, the homeowner pays for those repairs themselves. Hurricane coverage handles wind damage. Flood insurance handles water damage from rising water. The two work together, and most coastal homeowners need both. How to get flood insurance Most flood insurance in the U.S. is sold through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), administered by FEMA. A handful of private insurers also sell flood coverage, sometimes with higher limits than NFIP. A few things to know: There’s a 30-day waiting period for new NFIP policies, so you can’t buy coverage when a storm is already named. Mortgage lenders often require it if your home is in a high-risk flood zone (FEMA-designated Special Flood Hazard Area). Standard NFIP policies cover up to $250,000 for the dwelling and $100,000 for personal contents. Private flood insurance can offer higher limits. 💰 Check your flood zone before storm season starts Use FEMA’s Flood Map Service Center to look up your home’s flood zone in 30 seconds. If you’re in a “Zone A” or “Zone V” area, you’re in a high-risk zone and should already have flood insurance — your mortgage lender probably requires it. If you’re in “Zone X,” you’re in a lower-risk area, but coverage may still be worth it. The 30-day waiting period means now is the time to buy, not after a storm forms. What you can do to lower your hurricane insurance costs You can save money on hurricane insurance by taking proactive steps to minimize storm damage and by regularly looking for new coverage. Try these steps to reduce your home insurance premiums: Harden your home. Installing impact-resistant windows, roof clips or straps and anchor bolts can all make your home less susceptible to hurricane damage and qualify your policy for discounts. Apply for mitigation credits. Some states require insurance companies to provide mitigation credits to homeowners who harden their property against hurricane damage. An inspection may be needed to qualify. Review your coverage annually. The home insurance market in hurricane-prone states is evolving, so it’s smart to check your policy each year for changes. Shop the market. An independent insurance broker can be helpful in evaluating your insurance options. With large companies exiting some markets and states, a broker can help you zero in on smaller companies offering the coverage you need. Be strategic about a higher deductible. You will save money by increasing your hurricane deductible to 5% or even 10%, but only do this if you have money in reserves to cover the cost of the deductible. Understand your deductible trigger. Be sure you understand under what circumstances the hurricane deductible applies. This may not lower your premiums, but it could be useful information if you need to file a claim. When does a hurricane deductible actually kick in? The trigger varies by state and insurer, but most policies use one of three: A hurricane watch or warning is issued by the National Hurricane Center for any part of the state. In Florida, for example, the hurricane deductible activates the moment a watch or warning is posted and stays in effect until 72 hours after the last watch or warning ends. A landfall trigger, which kicks in only when a hurricane’s eye actually crosses land in your area. A wind-speed trigger, which activates when sustained winds reach a defined threshold — typically 74 mph for a hurricane deductible, or 39 mph for a named-storm deductible. The trigger language matters because it determines which deductible applies to a claim. A roof damaged by 70-mph winds during a tropical storm might be covered under your standard $1,000 deductible — or it might trigger your 2% hurricane deductible — depending on which trigger your policy uses. The Insurance Information Institute recommends reviewing your declarations page and asking your insurer to walk you through exactly when your hurricane deductible activates, before storm season starts. Frequently asked questions What states have hurricane deductibles? Nineteen states have hurricane deductibles. These are mainly states along the East Coast and Gulf, although insurers in some inland states may offer hurricane deductibles because of storm-track exposure. How is a hurricane deductible calculated? Hurricane deductibles are typically a percentage of your home’s insured value and often range from 1% to 10%. Flat rate deductibles are sometimes available. For a home with a $450,000 dwelling coverage limit, a 2% hurricane deduction would require homeowners to pay $9,000 out of pocket before insurance coverage begins. Is a hurricane deductible the same as a windstorm deductible? No, a hurricane deductible only applies to damage caused by named storms. Some insurance policies may have windstorm deductibles that apply to damage caused by any wind event. Why is Florida home insurance so expensive? High-intensity hurricanes, rising construction costs and a history of claims litigation have all led to increasing home insurance premiums in Florida. Major insurers have also left the state, leading to less competition and higher rates for residents. Can I negotiate my hurricane deductible? Not usually, but you can usually choose from available options. For instance, Florida law requires companies to offer hurricane deductibles of $500, 2%, 5% or 10%. Maryalene LaPonsieStaff Writer  . .Maryalene LaPonsie is a staff writer for Insure.com. She has 25 years of professional writing experience. She specializes in personal finance -- insurance, investing and retirement. In case you missed it What is HO-6 condo insurance and how much does it cost? Average homeowners insurance cost by ZIP code in 2026 What is dwelling coverage and how much do you need? 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By Les Masterson On this page What is a hurricane deductible — and why does it exist?How climate change is recalculating your risk — and your homeowners insurance rateHow much does hurricane coverage add to your home insurance premium?The "hurricane tax": How much adding hurricane coverage really costsWhich states have hurricane or named-storm deductibles?What's the difference between a hurricane deductible and a named-storm deductible?The no-deductible option: What's the tradeoff?Should you skip or raise your hurricane deductible?How a hurricane deductible works in practiceHurricane coverage doesn't pay for flood damage — here's what doesHow to get flood insuranceWhat you can do to lower your hurricane insurance costsWhen does a hurricane deductible actually kick in?Frequently asked questions ZIP Code Please enter valid ZIP See rates (844) 761-9316