Weather Impacts on Property Insurance Rates


A Rising Concern

Climate change is driving extreme weather events, causing record insurance claims and dramatic rate increases for property owners.

Surge in Natural Disasters

2023 saw record billion-dollar disasters exceeding $200 billion in damages. Colorado’s June 2023 hail outbreak ranks among the costliest state events recorded.

Rising Costs for Insurers

Catastrophic claims force insurers to raise premiums dramatically: • Coastal regions face 2-3x premium increases • Wildfire-prone areas experience nonrenewals or steep hikes • Hail-prone states like Colorado see deductibles shift to 1-5% of Coverage A • Building material inflation compounds rebuilding costs

Impact on Policyholders

Homeowners face difficult choices: • Higher premiums and larger deductibles • Some choose minimal coverage; others go uninsured • Example: One Coloradan saw $440 monthly increase in June 2025

Colorado Specifics

IssueImpact
Average Annual Hail Losses$151 million (2nd highest nationally)
10-Year Hail DamageOver $5 billion
Average Premiums$4,600/year (4th highest state)
Rate Increases 2018-2023Up 57.9%
Hail’s Premium Share50-70% of homeowners’ costs

Insurers’ Response

Companies are adapting through: • AI and advanced modeling for risk forecasting • Building code advocacy and mitigation discounts • Smart home system incentives

Government Action

Colorado’s HB 25-1302 creates: • “Strengthen Homes Enterprise” for hail-resistant roof grants • Wildfire reinsurance enterprise to stabilize rates • Funded via modest policy fees

Looking Ahead

Weather risk and insurance affordability remain linked. Success requires: • Keeping coverage affordable • Encouraging mitigation and risk reduction • Supporting resilient infrastructure • Collaboration between stakeholders.

Property owners must prepare for continued rate pressures while governments and insurers work toward sustainable solutions.


Scroll to Top