Home and contents insurance helps you cover the costs of restoring your property and valuables if they are damaged or stolen. As with any insurance policy, you’ll pay a premium to maintain your coverage and access financial support if disaster strikes. However, natural disasters can play a big part in just how much you pay.
Insurers are constantly looking at data to measure the amount of risk involved in insuring properties. If natural disasters are regularly reoccurring in your area, it’s likely that your insurer will increase these premiums to account for this higher level of risk.
This is because when the chance of a natural disaster is higher, the likelihood of losses is also higher; if the insurer doesn’t collect enough money to cover the associated risk, then there won’t be enough to cover your losses. To protect themselves, and ensure there’s enough money to go around, they’ll typically dish out higher premiums.
Unfortunately, as a homeowner, this means forking out extra funds, which can eat into your budget.
To put this premium increase into perspective, according to the Actuaries Institute, home insurance premiums rose 28%, to $1,894, in the year to 31 March 2023, with the highest risk properties, such as those in flood-prone areas, up by a much larger 50%.