Insurance Analysis
Florida homeowner insurance costs have tripled in five years. Private insurers are leaving the state. Citizens is overloaded. Here is what it means for your home's value and whether selling now makes financial sense.
Florida is in the midst of the worst property insurance crisis in the state's history. The average Florida homeowner now pays $4,200-$6,800 per year for property insurance - roughly three times the national average. In high-risk coastal areas, premiums regularly exceed $10,000-$20,000 annually.
This is not a temporary spike. The factors driving the crisis are structural and unlikely to reverse anytime soon:
Citizens Property Insurance Corporation is Florida's state-run insurer of last resort. It was created to provide coverage when private insurers will not. It was never intended to be a primary insurer for hundreds of thousands of Floridians. But that is exactly what it has become.
Citizens currently insures over 1.3 million policies - up from approximately 420,000 in 2019. This explosive growth happened as private insurers left the market or raised rates beyond what homeowners could afford, pushing them to Citizens as the only remaining option.
The risk: if a major hurricane hits Florida, Citizens may not have enough reserves to pay all claims. In that scenario, every Florida insurance policyholder - even those insured by private companies - can be assessed a surcharge to cover Citizens' shortfall. This has happened before (after the 2004-2005 hurricane seasons) and could happen again at a much larger scale given Citizens' current exposure.
The state is actively trying to reduce Citizens' policy count through depopulation programs that transfer policies to private insurers. But many of these private take-out companies are thinly capitalized and charge significantly higher premiums.
Since 2020, over a dozen private insurance companies have either left Florida, gone insolvent, or stopped writing new policies:
When an insurer goes insolvent, policyholders must scramble to find new coverage - often at dramatically higher rates. Some homeowners discover they cannot find any private coverage and are forced to Citizens.
The result is a shrinking pool of insurers competing for Florida business, which means less competition, higher prices, and fewer options for homeowners.
Here is what Florida homeowners are actually paying in 2026, compared to five years ago:
| Property Type | 2021 Average | 2026 Average | Increase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inland, post-2002 build | $1,800/year | $3,500-$4,500/year | +95-150% |
| Inland, pre-2002 build | $2,400/year | $4,800-$6,500/year | +100-170% |
| Coastal, post-2002 build | $3,200/year | $6,000-$9,000/year | +88-180% |
| Coastal, pre-2002 build | $4,500/year | $8,000-$15,000/year | +78-233% |
| Flood zone (any age) | $2,500-$4,000/year | $5,000-$12,000/year | +100-200% |
| Older roof (15+ years) | +$500/year surcharge | +$2,000-$5,000/year or uninsurable | +300-900% |
These are averages. Individual homeowners in high-risk areas report premium increases of 300-400% over five years. Some have received renewal quotes so high that the annual insurance premium approaches the property's monthly mortgage payment.
This is the critical connection most homeowners miss: rising insurance costs directly reduce your home's market value. Here is the math:
When a buyer qualifies for a mortgage, lenders look at the total monthly housing payment: principal, interest, taxes, and insurance (PITI). The buyer qualifies based on PITI not exceeding 28-36% of gross income.
If insurance increases from $300/month to $800/month, the buyer has $500 less available for their mortgage payment. At current interest rates, $500/month in mortgage capacity equals approximately $75,000 in purchasing power. That means a $500/month insurance increase effectively reduces what buyers can pay for your home by $75,000.
This is not theoretical. Markets with the highest insurance increases (Southwest Florida, coastal Panhandle, older inland construction) are seeing the largest home value softening. The correlation is direct and measurable.
For homeowners in these areas, every year of increasing premiums reduces your home's effective market value. Selling today means selling before next year's premium increase further erodes buyer purchasing power.
The insurance crisis does not affect all Florida homeowners equally. You are most impacted if:
This is the question every Florida homeowner in an affected area should be asking. Here is our honest assessment:
The crisis is not going to resolve quickly. Climate risk is increasing, not decreasing. Reinsurance costs are structural. Litigation reform takes years to show results. The insurance market is not going to suddenly become affordable in 2027 or 2028.
Property values in heavily affected areas will continue to soften. As premiums rise, buyer purchasing power decreases, and prices adjust downward. The home that is worth $300,000 today with $5,000/year insurance may only be worth $260,000 next year if insurance increases to $7,000/year.
The window to sell at current values is narrowing. Each insurance renewal cycle brings new rate increases. Homeowners who sell in 2026 will likely net more than those who wait until 2027 or 2028 in the most affected areas.
That said, not everyone should sell. If your home is inland, post-2002, with a newer roof and no flood zone designation, your insurance situation is manageable and likely to remain so. The crisis disproportionately impacts coastal, older, and flood-prone properties.
If you decide to sell, here are your paths:
Option 1: List on the MLS. Best for homes in good condition in areas where insurance is not yet prohibitive. Be prepared for buyers to negotiate aggressively on price to offset their insurance costs. List early in the year (January-May) before hurricane season further complicates transactions.
Option 2: Replace the roof and then sell. If your roof is the primary insurance barrier, investing $10,000-$25,000 in a new roof can make the property insurable at reasonable rates, opening it to financed buyers and potentially increasing the sale price by $30,000-$50,000. This only makes sense if you have the capital and time.
Option 3: Sell for cash as-is. The fastest option and the one that eliminates all insurance-related complications. A cash buyer does not need insurance to close, does not need a lender, and takes on the insurance risk themselves. You receive a fair offer based on the property's value and condition, close in 7-14 days, and move on.
For homeowners in the most affected categories (coastal, pre-2002, older roof, flood zone, prior claims), Option 3 often makes the most financial sense when you factor in the ongoing carrying costs and continued value erosion of holding the property.
Modest stabilization is possible as tort reform takes effect, but meaningful premium decreases are unlikely in the near term. Climate risk, reinsurance costs, and building material costs continue to drive rates upward across the state.
Yes. Cash buyers do not require insurance to close the transaction. If your home is uninsurable or only insurable at extreme cost, a cash sale is often the only practical option.
Significantly. A new roof with hurricane straps and current code compliance can reduce premiums by $2,000-$5,000/year. It also makes the property insurable by carriers that refuse to cover homes with older roofs.
Florida condos are seeing HOA increases of $200-$800/month driven by master insurance policy increases and new reserve funding requirements under SB 4D (structural inspection law). Special assessments of $10,000-$50,000+ per unit are increasingly common.
Citizens provides coverage but carries systemic risk. If a major hurricane causes losses exceeding Citizens' reserves, all Florida policyholders (including those with private insurance) can be assessed surcharges. Citizens is insurer of last resort, not a long-term solution.