The good news for 2026 is that home insurance hikes are slowing.
The bad news is they are still hikes.
After years of double-digit jumps, "only 4%" is what relief looks like now.
The Forecast
Insurify expects the average home insurance bill to rise 4% in 2026. That would push it to $3,057, the report found.
It follows a 12% jump in 2025. Step back, and the climb is steep.
Prices are up about 46% since 2021. That is nearly three times the pace of inflation.
The pain is not even. California is set to rise fastest in 2026, at about 16%.
Nebraska, New Mexico, and Georgia come next. Florida is still the priciest of all, near $8,292 a year.
That is almost three times the national average. Where you live drives the bill.
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What Buyers Can Do
A few moves can soften the blow.
- Price insurance before you buy a home, not at the closing table. Check the risk in your ZIP code using the public Treasury data.
- Treat upgrades as leverage. A new roof or wildfire-hardening can earn discounts.
- Shop around hard. The gap between firms is wide, and small regional ones are often cheaper.
These are not magic fixes. They are the few levers a buyer actually controls.
The State-By-State Picture
The 2026 forecast splits sharply by state. California climbs to about $2,843.
Nebraska heads toward about $4,560. New Mexico rises about 10.8%.
Georgia rounds out the top movers, near 10%. Some 2025 jumps were brutal.
Minnesota and Colorado both rose more than 30%. The average owner now pays about $900 more than in 2021.
That is a real dent in a budget. Relief is not spread evenly either.
The priciest states keep rising fastest. Florida stays in a league of its own.
Its typical bill tops $8,000 a year. No other state comes close.
Some insurers are getting creative. A few now lock your price for three years.
That stability is in high demand. One in four owners say they would drop coverage if they could.
Lenders usually will not let them. So most just keep paying the higher bill.
Bills keep climbing in nearly every state. Only the pace is slowing.
What To Watch
Three signals show where this is heading. Watch the size of the state backup plans.
Watch the cost of reinsurance when it renews each January and June. And watch the disaster count now kept by Climate Central.
Mortgage costs matter too. The Fed has signaled no rate cuts are coming fast.
So the loan stays high while insurance keeps climbing. In a growing number of ZIP codes, the question is changing.
It is shifting from what insurance costs to whether you can get it at all.
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