California's largest home insurer needed help to stay standing.
Not from customers. From its own parent company, to the tune of $400 million.
That is how strained the market has become.
The Lifeline
In May 2025, the state granted State Farm a 17% emergency rate increase on home policies. The company had asked for 21.8%, the state said.
The catch was steep. The parent firm had to wire in $400 million to prop up the unit.
A judge found State Farm in "extraordinary financial distress." The cash was meant to keep it solvent.
It also agreed to stop new block non-renewals through the end of 2025. That is when an insurer drops whole groups of policies at once.
Customers got a pause. The company got room to breathe.
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What The 2026 Settlement Changed
The story did not end there. In March 2026, the state, State Farm, and a consumer group reached a settlement.
The 17% home increase stayed in place. Condo rates were cut from 15% to about 5.8%.
Rental dwelling rates dropped from 38% to 32.8%. Customers who were overcharged are owed refunds with 10% interest.
The freeze on cancellations was extended for at least another year. That last piece matters most.
It keeps a wave of dropped policies from flooding the housing market. Stability now buys time later.
Why This Is The Whole Story
This is what "the models are broken" looks like in one firm. The biggest name in California home insurance needed an emergency rate.
It also needed a cash injection just to keep writing policies. The fires were the trigger.
But the math behind the business was the real problem. A bailout does not fix that.
How We Got Here
The fight started in February 2025. State Farm asked for a 22% hike on home policies.
It also sought 15% on renters and condos. On rentals, it asked for 38%.
A three-day hearing followed in April. The judge weighed the company's books in detail.
The case dragged on for months. There were at least nine public appearances before it settled.
Renters ended up near 15.65%. Refunds run back to June 1, 2025.
A separate review is still open. It looks at how the firm handles claims.
State Farm remains the state's largest home insurer. So its health shapes the whole market.
When the biggest carrier wobbles, everyone feels it. Fewer rivals means fewer choices for owners.
That is why the state stepped in so hard. A failure here would ripple for years.
The deal still needs a judge's sign-off. But the rates are already in effect.
Customers will see the changes on renewal. Some are owed money back.
Worth Noting
A rate hike and a lifeline bought time. They did not fix the risk.
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