Houston Chronicle

Many home insurance premiums are rising

- By Kathy Orton

Ken Hoagland was surprised to see his monthly mortgage payment increase recently.

“I noticed that our mortgage had gone up $100 on a $1,250 mortgage,” he said. “So, I looked into it. First, I called the mortgage company and they said, ‘It’s costing a lot more to insure your house. Talk to (the insurance company).’ So then I called USAA and said, ‘What’s going on?’ ”

Across the country, homeowners renewing their policies are discoverin­g that rising material costs, supply chain disruption­s and climate change are combining to drive premiums up by an average 4 percent to an average annual premium of $1,398, according to the Insurance Informatio­n Institute, a nonprofit organizati­on known as Triple-I that provides informatio­n on the insurance industry. Triple-I uses data from Standard & Poor’s Global Market Intelligen­ce for its analysis.

Since 2017, premium rates are up 11.4 percent on average, which means they are rising faster than inflation — and insurance experts expect that the rates will stay high.

“From everything I know about homeowners’ risk, I expected those numbers to be higher,” said Dale Porfilio, the chief insurance officer at Triple-I. “Honestly, I would say they still should go up further.”

Most mortgage lenders require borrowers to carry a homeowners insurance policy. According to a recent analysis by Bankrate.com, the average homeowner spends about 1.91 percent of their household income on home insurance.

The cost of insuring a home depends on several factors. Location often drives costs up, particular­ly if the house is in an area prone to natural disasters. Some areas have higher rates because it costs more to rebuild a house there.

How resistant a house is to natural disaster — for example, if it was built to withstand an earthquake — can affect rates.

Replacemen­t cost

When Hoagland spoke to his insurance agent, he learned that the increases in his insurance premium were tied to the rising price of lumber, a severe shortage of skilled labor and inflation. All those factors caused the replacemen­t cost of his house to rise. The insurance company calculated the cost to rebuild his 1871 Tuscan-style house in Berkley Springs, W.Va., which he bought for $265,000 less than two years ago, at $625,000.

“My first instinct was this was some kind of insurance company scam,” Hoagland said. “I called all of the toprated insurance companies, five or six of them, and said, ‘I’m not sure I want to insure replacemen­t value.’ Every single one of them said, ‘No, that’s the only insurance we provide.’ ”

Most homeowners want their home back in the condition it was before the event destroyed it, which is why replacemen­t cost — the cost to rebuild the home as it was — often differs from the value of the home. Replacemen­t cost also doesn’t take into account the value of the land. In some cases, the replacemen­t cost of a house is less than the value of the house because the land value is high in that area.

“We offer what’s referred to as replacemen­t cost coverage,” said Karen Collins, the assistant vice president for personal lines at the American Property and Casualty Insurance Associatio­n, the largest insurance trade associatio­n. “We want to rebuild, to replace what you had before. We try to estimate that on an inflation factor. But when you have such an abnormal rate of inflation, those automated processes may not always keep up.”

Rising costs for raw materials, particular­ly lumber, and supply chain disruption­s are adding to the bottom line. When the pandemic hit, lumber producers feared a repeat of the Great Recession. They cut production and unloaded inventory. But demand soared, catching them by surprise. The price of lumber spiked to $1,500 per thousand feet of board in March, a 400 percent yearover-year increase. The Biden administra­tion’s decision in November to double the tariff on Canadian lumber to 18 percent, up from 9 percent during the Trump administra­tion, also affected prices. Canada has been the largest U.S. trade partner for lumber, providing about 30 percent of U.S. supply.

“Right now, lumber prices are about $900 per thousand board feet,” said Robert Dietz, the chief economist at the National Associatio­n of Home Builders. “Domestic lumber production has really not increased in the United States. The economics of lumber tariffs when we’re trying to fight inflation don’t make any sense.”

The supply chain bottleneck has also made refrigerat­ors and stoves more expensive and scarce. A survey by the NAHB of its members in May found shortages of materials more widespread than at any time since NAHB began tracking the issue in the 1990s. Appliances were rated the items most in short supply, followed by lumber.

Climate risk

Climate change also is contributi­ng to higher rates. The year began with a devastatin­g winter freeze in Texas, which led to the state’s largest non-hurricane weather loss event. Hurricane Ida, which hit in late summer, is expected to rank among the five costliest hurricanes in U.S. history. It is too soon to calculate the losses from the tornadoes that ripped through eight states in early December.

Porfilio said insured damage from tornadoes, hurricanes, severe storms, wildfires and other natural disasters has reached $82 billion this year, bringing the total from 2017 until now to more than $400 billion.

“Climate risk is continuing to put pressure on all things weather-related,” Porfilio said. “We are seeing more severe hurricanes, more severe wildfires and the science isn’t as clear on tornado events in terms of whether they’re changing in frequency or not. But what we definitely do know is that severity is going up.”

When a natural disaster affects a wide area, the demand for materials and labor puts pressure on prices.

“What usually happens when you have an event that is destroying or severely damaging hundreds of thousands in a metro area is the building material pricing in those markets tends to be elevated for about six, sometimes as much as nine months,” Dietz said. “You get an increased labor shortage in the market and neighborin­g markets because a lot of labor and constructi­on know-how goes into the remodeling sector for repair efforts.”

Because of the rash of natural disasters, some insurance companies are offering extended replacemen­t cost coverage at an additional cost.

Home insurance costs are rising faster in some states than others.

Texas’ rates went up 18 percent, and California’s increased 9.6 percent. D.C. saw a 3.2 percent increase; Maryland a 13.4 percent increase and Virginia 14.8 percent. West Virginia, where Hoagland has his house, went up 3.1 percent.

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