The LA fires are deepening a home insurance crisis in California

LA Fires
Death toll
Costly
Economic damage
Major insurers
Allstate
Wildfires
A tricky landscape
Driving up prices
Public policies would be cheaper
Other states
Florida and Lousiana
Climate-related disasters
LA Fires

The uncontrolled fires in LA have destroyed entire neighborhoods and left historic damage, but they have also deepened a home insurance crisis in California.

Death toll

According to AP News, until Jan. 12, the fires have killed 24, 16 are missing, and thousands of homes were destroyed. The heavy winds accelerated the flames.

Costly

Still, the fires have also caused historic economic losses. According to the Wall Street Journal, the fires destroyed many high-value homes— some of the most expensive in America.

Economic damage

The newspaper reported that industry officials warned of widespread economic damage comparable to some of the biggest recent fire disasters. The news came as California was experiencing an insurance crisis.

Major insurers

Since 2022, major insurance companies have retreated from California, leaving thousands of homeowners scrambling for protection in a constricted market.

Allstate

According to Fox News, Allstate and State Farm, the largest home insurer in America, left in 2022. Tokyo Marine, and Trans-Pacific, under the same parent corporation, followed.

Wildfires

According to CNBC, the leading reason insurance companies left California was wildfires, but they also cited inflation and high construction costs to justify reducing their coverage.

A tricky landscape

CNBC cited experts who said the insurance landscape is tricky in California due to regulations that require extra approval from the local authority when a company wants to raise rates above 7%.

"A tale of two states"

Michael Soller, a spokesperson for the state Department of Insurance, told The LA Times that California's situation is now "a tale of two states."

Driving up prices

Soller explained that a person in the San Fernando Valley could easily insure their home with many options and prices, while someone in a neighborhood close to nature would have fewer options at higher prices.

Public policies would be cheaper

"The cost to insure new home customers in California is far higher than the price they would pay for policies due to wildfires," Allstate said in a statement collected by AP News.

Other states

Insurance companies are not only pulling from California, though. According to CNBC, the issue also affects other states, with several areas prone to natural disasters.

Florida and Lousiana

The outlet cited the cases of Florida and Louisiana, which have high flood and hurricane risks. In 2022, global insured losses from natural disasters topped $130 billion.

Climate-related disasters

CNBC cited experts who said the ripple effect could continue nationwide as climate change intensifies natural disasters and makes them more frequent.

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