Home Insurance Rates by State (2026)
Home insurance costs vary dramatically by state — by as much as 10x from the cheapest to most expensive. Your state determines your exposure to natural disasters like hurricanes, tornadoes, wildfires, and hail, which are the primary drivers of rate differences. Below are 2026 average annual premiums for $300,000 in dwelling coverage:
| State | Avg Annual Premium | Avg Monthly |
|---|---|---|
| Oklahoma | $5,180 | $432 |
| Kansas | $4,620 | $385 |
| Nebraska | $4,390 | $366 |
| Florida | $4,120 | $343 |
| Louisiana | $3,980 | $332 |
| Texas | $3,540 | $295 |
| Mississippi | $3,210 | $268 |
| Arkansas | $2,840 | $237 |
| Missouri | $2,760 | $230 |
| Colorado | $2,680 | $223 |
| Alabama | $2,510 | $209 |
| South Carolina | $2,390 | $199 |
| Georgia | $2,180 | $182 |
| Tennessee | $2,090 | $174 |
| Illinois | $1,980 | $165 |
| North Carolina | $1,920 | $160 |
| Indiana | $1,840 | $153 |
| National Average | $1,820 | $152 |
| Ohio | $1,760 | $147 |
| Michigan | $1,690 | $141 |
| Pennsylvania | $1,540 | $128 |
| New York | $1,480 | $123 |
| Virginia | $1,420 | $118 |
| Minnesota | $1,390 | $116 |
| Arizona | $1,340 | $112 |
| California | $1,290 | $108 |
| Washington | $1,180 | $98 |
| Massachusetts | $1,140 | $95 |
| Nevada | $1,080 | $90 |
| Utah | $980 | $82 |
| Oregon | $920 | $77 |
| Vermont | $720 | $60 |
| Hawaii | $380 | $32 |
Note: Rates shown are statewide averages for a standard HO-3 policy on a $300,000 home. Your actual rate depends on your home's age, construction type, location, claims history, credit score, and chosen deductible.
Why Rates Vary So Much by State
The biggest factor in state-level home insurance pricing is natural disaster risk. States in Tornado Alley (Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska) pay the highest rates in the country because the frequency and severity of hail and tornado damage drives enormous claims costs. Coastal states like Florida and Louisiana face hurricane risk. Colorado and California face wildfire and hail exposure.
Other State-Level Factors
Beyond weather, insurers look at state-specific factors including: construction costs (how much it costs to rebuild in that market), the legal environment (states with more litigation have higher rates), local building codes, and the availability of reinsurance in high-risk markets. Florida's insurance market has been particularly stressed in recent years with several major insurers exiting the state entirely.
What Affects Your Individual Rate
Even within a state, your personal rate can vary by hundreds or thousands of dollars based on:
- Home age and construction — older homes cost more to insure; brick costs less than frame
- Roof age and type — a new impact-resistant roof can save 20–30% on premiums
- Location within the state — coastal or flood-prone ZIP codes cost significantly more
- Claims history — prior claims stay on your record for 5–7 years
- Credit score — in most states, better credit = lower premiums
- Deductible amount — a higher deductible means a lower premium
- Coverage amount — insuring to full replacement cost vs. market value
- Bundling — combining home and auto with the same insurer saves 10–25%
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