Insurance experts said the back-to-back hurricanes could signal rising insurance rates nationwide.
AdvertisementTwo back-to-back hurricanes in Florida in recent weeks will likely raise home insurance rates even higher in a state that is already grappling with prices nearly four times the national average, insurance experts told Business Insider.
The compounding financial crises of Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton could also point to looming hikes in insurance rates nationwide, the home insurance experts said.
They pointed to the recent Florida storms as examples of the increasingly severe and frequent climate catastrophes wreaking havoc on the global insurance market.
AdvertisementAn uptick in reinsurance rates in recent years has been a driving force behind climbing insurance rates nationwide, said Kyle Ulrich, president and CEO of the Florida Association of Insurance Agents.
Persons:
—, Kyle Ulrich, it's, Hurricane Helene, Hurricane Milton, Jeffrey Schlegelmilch, Oscar Miniet, Miniet, Coral, Milton, Helene, Shahid Hamid, Jeremy Porter, Porter, Hamid, Ulrich, Oscar Seikaly, Penny, Liao
Organizations:
Service, Florida Association of Insurance, Intercontinental Exchange, CBS News, Columbia Climate School's, Center for Disaster Preparedness, Tampa, Florida International University, Research Center's Laboratory for Insurance, Financial, Economic Research, Allstate, State, Florida Association of Insurance Agents, NSI Insurance, Hurricanes
Locations:
Florida, Hurricane, California, Illinois, Arkansas, Deltona, Jacksonville, Sarasota, Central Florida, Kentucky, Idaho, London, Bermuda, Japan