Home Insurance Quote Calculator — 2026 Annual Homeowners Premium by Dwelling Coverage & ZIP
Price a 2026 homeowners insurance policy by dwelling rebuild cost, ZIP, home age, roof age, construction type, deductible, and liability factors — then line up broker quotes from Policygenius, Matic, Hippo, Lemonade, and Liberty Mutual.
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Location
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Frequently Asked Questions
Q
How much does homeowners insurance cost per year in 2026?
As of April 2026, the US national average homeowners premium is about $2,550/yr for $300,000 in dwelling coverage with a $1,000 deductible. Florida averages $5,940–$7,136/yr (highest in the US), Louisiana and Nebraska top $6,000/yr, Oklahoma around $4,800/yr, and California wildfire WUI zones $2,200–$4,500+/yr. Low-cost states (Vermont, New Hampshire, Oregon, Utah, Delaware) run $900–$1,600/yr. Premiums are up roughly 35–45% since 2021 and Insurify projects rates to rise for the fifth consecutive year in 2026.
US national average: $2,550/yr on $300K dwelling + $1,000 deductible
Annual rate increases through 2026: 10–15% at renewal
State / Region
Dwelling $300K, Ded $1K
Primary Driver
Florida (coastal)
$5,940–$10,000+
Hurricane + litigation
Louisiana
$6,000–$9,000
Hurricane + flood
Nebraska
$6,000–$8,500
Hail + tornado
Texas (inland)
$3,200–$4,500
Hail + tornado
California (WUI)
$2,200–$6,000
Wildfire
National average
$2,550
Baseline
Vermont / NH
$900–$1,300
Low catastrophe risk
Q
What is dwelling coverage and how much do I need?
Dwelling coverage (Coverage A) is the amount an insurer will pay to rebuild your home's structure after a total loss — NOT your market value, and NOT what you paid for the property. It must reflect replacement cost, calculated by multiplying square footage by local construction cost per sqft. A 2,000 sqft home in a $180/sqft build market needs $360,000 dwelling coverage, even if Zillow lists the property at $550,000 (the land and location are not insured). Under-insuring dwelling coverage is the single most common homeowner mistake — policies with coinsurance clauses pay pro-rata on partial losses if dwelling is set below 80% of actual replacement cost.
Dwelling = rebuild cost, NOT market value or purchase price
Formula: square footage × local cost per sqft to rebuild
Typical 2026 build cost: $150–$300/sqft depending on region and finish
Coinsurance trap: under 80% of replacement = pro-rata claim payout
Re-check every 2–3 years — construction cost inflation ran 7–12% annually 2021–2025
Q
How much can I save by raising my deductible?
Raising a deductible from $500 to $1,000 typically cuts premium 5–10%; $1,000 to $2,500 cuts another 10–15%; $2,500 to $5,000 cuts another 5–10%. On a $2,550/yr national-average policy, jumping $500 to $2,500 saves roughly $512/yr per Insurance.com data. In hurricane and wind states, you will also have a separate wind/hail or hurricane deductible, usually expressed as 1–5% of dwelling coverage. On $300,000 dwelling, a 2% wind deductible means $6,000 out-of-pocket before the insurer pays on any named-storm claim. Florida and coastal Texas often make percentage-based hurricane deductibles mandatory.
Hurricane / wind deductibles: 1–5% of dwelling (separate from all-other-perils)
On $300K dwelling, 2% wind deductible = $6,000 out-of-pocket per storm
FL / TX coastal: percentage hurricane deductible usually MANDATORY
Deductible
Typical Premium Impact
Out-of-Pocket Per Claim
$500
Baseline +5–10%
$500
$1,000 (US standard)
Baseline
$1,000
$2,500
−10–15%
$2,500
$5,000
−15–20%
$5,000
2% wind (on $300K)
Standard in FL/TX coast
$6,000 per named storm
5% hurricane (on $300K)
Mandatory some ZIPs
$15,000 per hurricane
Q
What is the difference between an HO-3 and HO-5 policy?
HO-3 is the standard US homeowners policy form — it covers your dwelling on an open-perils basis (anything not explicitly excluded is covered) but only covers personal property on a named-perils basis with actual cash value payout. HO-5 upgrades both sides to open perils AND pays replacement cost on personal property (no depreciation haircut). HO-5 typically costs 5–20% more than HO-3 for the same dwelling limit, and not every carrier writes HO-5 in every state. HO-5 is worth the uplift if you have high-value contents (jewelry, electronics, art, designer furniture) that would get hit by depreciation on an HO-3 claim.
HO-3: open perils on home, NAMED perils on contents, ACV on contents
HO-5: open perils on BOTH home and contents, replacement cost on contents
HO-5 typically costs 5–20% more than HO-3 for identical dwelling limit
HO-5 not available from every carrier in every state
HO-5 worth it for: high-value contents, electronics-heavy households, jewelry
Does a new roof or impact-resistant roof lower my premium?
Yes, significantly. Replacing a 20+ year asphalt roof with a new roof typically earns 5–35% premium discount. A Class 4 impact-resistant shingle (UL 2218 rated) adds another 11–25% off the wind/hail portion of your policy — on a $4,000 Texas policy, that is $800–$1,000/yr savings. A metal roof qualifies for impact-resistant and often fire-resistive discounts. Keep in mind that a 20+ year roof is now a coverage-availability issue: many carriers refuse to write new policies on roofs older than 15–20 years, and others will only offer ACV (actual cash value, heavily depreciated) settlement instead of replacement cost. Roof age and class are usually the single biggest underwriting factor after ZIP.
New roof (0–5 yr) discount: 5–35% on full premium
Class 4 impact-resistant shingle: additional 11–25% off wind/hail portion
Metal roof: impact + fire-resistive discounts, often 15–25% combined
20+ year asphalt roof: $1,000–$2,000/yr penalty OR coverage refusal
ACV-only settlement: depreciated payout (10 yr roof = 50% payout)
Roof age = top-3 underwriting factor after dwelling amount and ZIP
Q
What does homeowners insurance NOT cover?
Standard HO-3 and HO-5 policies EXCLUDE flood, earthquake, sinkhole (in most states), mold beyond sudden-event scope, termite and pest damage, normal wear and tear, neglect and deferred maintenance, acts of war, nuclear incidents, and intentional damage. Flood coverage requires a separate NFIP policy ($400–$1,800/yr typical) or private flood carrier. Earthquake is a separate endorsement or standalone policy, mandatory for California wildfire-zone mortgages. Starting January 1, 2026, Nevada insurers are permitted to exclude wildfire from standard homeowners policies and sell it as a separate standalone product — a trend likely to spread to other Western wildfire states. Always read the actual policy PDF before signing.
Flood: NEVER in standard HO policies — NFIP or private flood required
Earthquake: separate endorsement, standalone in CA and WA
Wildfire exclusions expanding: Nevada Jan 1 2026, watch CA/OR/WA
Sinkhole: extra rider in FL, TX, TN, AL, KY
Mold: covered only if tied to sudden covered peril (pipe burst)
Termite / pest damage / wear-and-tear / neglect: NEVER covered
Pool or restricted-breed dog: may be excluded unless disclosed upfront
Example Calculations
1Standard 2,000 sqft frame home in Dallas, TX
Inputs
Dwelling coverage$320,000
ZIP75201 Dallas, TX
Home age10–25 yr
Roof age6–10 yr
ConstructionFrame
Deductible$1,000
Policy typeHO-3
Result
Typical annual premium$3,200 – $4,400/yr
2% wind deductible (separate)$6,400 per named storm
With $2,500 all-other-perils deductible$2,720–$3,700/yr
With Class 4 impact-resistant roof−11–25% on wind portion
Dallas is in Texas hail alley, which drives premium 30–45% above the national average. The standard 2% wind/hail deductible is a separate $6,400 hit per named storm event. Upgrading to impact-resistant shingles is the single highest-ROI improvement in this market.
2Coastal Miami, FL masonry home
Inputs
Dwelling coverage$500,000
ZIP33139 Miami Beach, FL
Home age25–50 yr
Roof age11–15 yr
ConstructionMasonry (CBS)
Deductible$2,500
Policy typeHO-3
Result
Typical annual premium$9,800 – $14,500/yr
5% hurricane deductible (mandatory)$25,000 per hurricane
Flood (separate NFIP or private)+$2,000–$6,000/yr
Wind-mitigation form discount−10–40% possible
Miami Beach is the most expensive residential insurance market in the US. Masonry concrete block construction (CBS) pulls premium 10–20% below a wood-frame equivalent. A wind-mitigation inspection form is mandatory in Florida and can cut premium 10–40% if shutters, roof straps, and opening protection are documented.
3California wildfire-zone superior-construction home
Inputs
Dwelling coverage$800,000
ZIP90049 Brentwood, CA (WUI)
Home ageNew (0–10 yr)
Roof age0–5 yr (Class A fire)
ConstructionSuperior (steel / concrete)
Deductible$2,500
Policy typeHO-5
Result
Typical annual premium$5,400 – $9,800/yr
FAIR Plan (if admitted carrier denies)$3,000–$6,000 dwelling-only
Wraparound for contents + liability+$900–$1,800/yr
Defensible space + hardening credit−5–15% premium
California wildfire Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) ZIPs are increasingly non-renewing through admitted carriers. A $5M+ superior-construction new build still gets coverage but pays fire-hardened-but-high-risk pricing. The California FAIR Plan is a dwelling-only fallback requiring a separate wraparound policy for contents and liability.
Every carrier builds premium from a state-filed base rate per $1,000 of dwelling coverage, then stacks multiplicative factors for ZIP, home age, roof age, construction, deductible, and policy type. Flat liability surcharges (pool $50–$300, restricted dog breed $50–$250) are added last. Flood and earthquake are NEVER in this stack — they are separate policies.
Where:
Dwelling base rate= Carrier-filed $ per $1,000 of Coverage A; varies $2.50–$15 per state and credit tier
ZIP / catastrophe factor= Florida 2.0–3.5x national; LA/NE 2.0–2.8x; CA WUI 1.4–3.0x; rural Midwest 0.7–0.9x
Home-age factor= New (0–10 yr) 0.60–0.85; 10–25 yr 1.0; 25–50 yr 1.05–1.15; 50+ yr 1.15–1.35
Roof-age factor= 0–5 yr 0.65–0.85; 6–15 yr 1.0; 16–20 yr 1.10–1.25; 20+ yr 1.25–1.50 OR coverage denial
Construction factor= Frame 1.0 (baseline); masonry / brick 0.85–0.95; superior (concrete, steel) 0.80–0.90
Liability loadings= Pool +$50–$300/yr; restricted-breed dog +$50–$250/yr; trampoline +$50–$150/yr
Homeowners Insurance Cost in 2026: What US Homeowners Actually Pay
1
Summary: What Homeowners Insurance Actually Costs in 2026
US homeowners insurance in April 2026 averages about $2,550 per year for $300,000 in dwelling coverage and a $1,000 deductible, according to rate data aggregated from Bankrate, Insurance.com, MoneyGeek, Insurify, and NerdWallet. That average masks a 7–8x spread between states: Florida averages $5,940–$7,136/yr (the US peak), Louisiana and Nebraska both top $6,000/yr, Oklahoma runs $4,800/yr, Texas sits at $3,200–$4,500/yr depending on hail proximity, California wildfire WUI ZIPs price $2,200–$6,000+/yr, and low-catastrophe states (Vermont, New Hampshire, Oregon, Utah, Delaware) run $900–$1,600/yr. Insurify projects homeowners rates will rise for the fifth consecutive year in 2026, continuing a cumulative 35–45% increase since 2021. A typical renewal notice in 2026 shows a 10–15% rate increase even with no claims filed.
Pricing is stacked multiplicatively from seven drivers: (1) dwelling coverage amount (rebuild cost, not market value); (2) ZIP code catastrophe exposure (hurricane, wildfire, hail, tornado, earthquake); (3) home age (new builds earn up to 40% discount); (4) roof age and class (a new Class 4 impact-resistant roof can cut premium 15–30% combined); (5) construction type (masonry beats frame 5–15%, superior concrete/steel beats masonry another 5–10%); (6) deductible choice ($500 to $5,000 saves $500+/yr on a national-average policy); (7) policy form (HO-5 runs 5–20% above HO-3). Liability loadings from swimming pools ($50–$300/yr) and restricted-breed dogs ($50–$250/yr) stack on top. Flood and earthquake are ALWAYS separately priced — never assume they are bundled. For the full cost picture of homeownership, pair this estimate with the mortgage calculator for monthly PITI and the property tax calculator for the escrow-sibling line.
Typical 2026 US homeowners insurance annual premium for $300K dwelling coverage and $1,000 deductible. Source: Insurance.com (April 2026), Bankrate, MoneyGeek, Insurify, NerdWallet, state Department of Insurance filings.
State / Region
Dwelling $300K, Ded $1K
Primary Driver
Direction
Florida (coastal)
$5,940–$10,000+
Hurricane + litigation
Up 15–25% 2026
Louisiana
$6,000–$9,000
Hurricane + flood-adjacent
Up 58% 2025–26
Nebraska
$6,000–$8,500
Hail + tornado
Up 10–15%
Oklahoma
$4,800–$6,500
Tornado + hail
Up 10–15%
Texas (inland)
$3,200–$4,500
Hail alley
Up 8–12%
California (WUI)
$2,200–$6,000+
Wildfire
Up 16% 2026
US national avg
$2,550
Baseline
Up 10–15%
Low-cost (VT/NH/OR)
$900–$1,600
Low catastrophe
Up 5–8%
If your renewal quote arrives at 20%+ above last year with no claims filed, shop 3 brokers before locking in. Re-quoting through Policygenius, Matic, and an independent local agent routinely uncovers a 15–30% spread on identical coverage — especially in Florida, California, and Texas where carriers are selectively non-renewing and then re-pricing.
2
How to Calculate Dwelling Coverage Correctly
Dwelling coverage (Coverage A) is the amount an insurer pays to rebuild your home's structure after a covered total loss. It is NOT market value, NOT your purchase price, and NOT your Zillow Zestimate — all three include land and location, neither of which is insured. The correct formula is square footage multiplied by local replacement cost per square foot. In 2026 the national build-cost range is $150–$300/sqft depending on market and finish level: entry-level tract homes in the Southeast run $150–$180/sqft, mid-market Midwest and Mountain West $180–$220/sqft, coastal California and Northeast metros $250–$400/sqft, and custom builds anywhere $300–$500+/sqft. A 2,400 sqft home in a $200/sqft market needs $480,000 dwelling coverage even if the property is listed at $650,000 and you bought it for $580,000.
The most costly homeowner mistake is accepting the dwelling limit an agent suggests without verifying it against actual rebuild cost. Every major carrier uses an 80% coinsurance clause: if your dwelling limit is set below 80% of actual replacement cost at time of loss, the carrier pays a pro-rata fraction on EVERY partial claim, not just total losses. A burst pipe that causes $30,000 of damage on a home with $360,000 dwelling limit where actual replacement cost is $500,000 would pay just $21,600 (72% of $30,000) — leaving the homeowner with $8,400 plus the deductible out-of-pocket. Guaranteed replacement cost and extended replacement cost endorsements (+5–10% premium) remove that trap, and in 2026 construction-inflation markets they are routinely worth the uplift. Cross-reference your dwelling limit against the home equity calculator — under-insured homes create equity illusion on paper that disappears after a partial loss.
Re-verify limit every 2–3 years — construction inflation ran 7–12%/yr 2021–2025
Other coverage tiers anchor to dwelling: Coverage B (other structures) 10%; Coverage C (contents) 50–70%; Coverage D (loss of use) 20–30%; Coverage E (liability) $100K–$500K
3
The Seven Factors That Move Your Quote
Beyond dwelling limit, seven variables determine your final quote. ZIP code is the single largest multiplier: Florida coastal ZIPs run 2–3.5x the national average, Louisiana and Nebraska 2–2.8x, California WUI wildfire zones 1.4–3.0x, Texas hail alley 1.4–1.8x. Home age climbs the premium: a new build (0–10 yr) earns up to a 40% discount on new-construction underwriting tiers; 10–25 years is baseline; 25–50 years adds 5–15% for outdated electrical and plumbing; 50+ years adds 15–35% and increasingly triggers mandatory upgrades (knob-and-tube wiring removal, galvanized pipe replacement) before coverage is bound.
Roof age and class are the most underrated lever because they operate on both the premium AND the availability axis. A new 0–5 year roof earns a 5–35% premium discount, a Class 4 UL-2218 impact-resistant shingle earns another 11–25% off the wind/hail portion specifically, and a metal roof stacks impact + fire-resistive credits routinely totaling 15–25%. But a 20+ year asphalt roof is a coverage crisis: many admitted carriers refuse to write new policies above 15 years of roof age, others will write only with ACV (actual cash value — depreciated payout) settlement instead of replacement cost, and some force roof replacement as a binding contingency. Construction type layers on top: frame is the baseline, masonry / brick runs 5–15% below frame, and superior (concrete, steel, fire-resistive commercial-grade) runs another 5–10% below masonry.
Deductible choice is your most controllable post-ZIP lever. Raising from $500 to $1,000 cuts premium 5–10%; $1,000 to $2,500 cuts another 10–15%; $2,500 to $5,000 cuts another 5–10%. Hurricane and wind/hail deductibles in coastal and high-wind markets are separate percentage-based structures (1–5% of dwelling), frequently MANDATORY in Florida, coastal Texas, and Louisiana. On a $300,000 dwelling with a 2% wind deductible, every named storm triggers a $6,000 out-of-pocket before the insurer pays anything. Policy form (HO-3 vs HO-5) adds 5–20% for the upgraded personal-property coverage. Finally, liability factors: swimming pools add $50–$300/yr loading, restricted-breed dogs (pit bull, rottweiler, doberman, wolf hybrid) add $50–$250/yr or trigger an exclusion rider entirely. A trampoline can cost the homeowner the policy at some carriers.
Always request a wind-mitigation inspection if you own in Florida, coastal Texas, Louisiana, or Alabama. Documented hurricane straps, impact shutters, and opening protection can cut premium 10–40% on a single inspection. The inspection costs $75–$150 and pays back on the first renewal.
ZIP / catastrophe exposure: Florida 2.0–3.5x, LA/NE 2.0–2.8x, CA WUI 1.4–3.0x, TX hail 1.4–1.8x
Home age: new 0.60–0.85x; 25–50 yr 1.05–1.15x; 50+ yr 1.15–1.35x
Roof age: 0–5 yr 0.65–0.85x; 16–20 yr 1.10–1.25x; 20+ yr 1.25–1.50x or denial
Roof class: Class 4 impact-resistant −11–25% wind/hail portion
Construction: frame 1.0; masonry −5 to −15%; superior −10 to −25% combined
Deductible: $500 → $5,000 saves $500–$900/yr on a national policy
Wind/hurricane deductible: 1–5% of dwelling, separate, often mandatory FL/TX/LA
Policy form: HO-5 runs 5–20% above HO-3
Pool +$50–$300/yr; restricted-breed dog +$50–$250/yr or exclusion
4
HO-3 vs HO-5 and What Standard Policies Do Not Cover
The US homeowners policy landscape is dominated by two forms. HO-3 is the standard: open-perils coverage on the dwelling (Coverage A — anything not explicitly excluded is covered) but named-perils coverage on personal property (Coverage C — only listed events trigger a claim). HO-3 settlements on personal property are typically ACV (actual cash value — with depreciation subtracted). HO-5 upgrades both sides: open perils on both dwelling AND contents, plus replacement-cost settlement on personal property (no depreciation haircut). HO-5 costs 5–20% more than an identical-limit HO-3 and is not available from every carrier in every state. HO-5 is worth the uplift if you have high-value contents — jewelry over $5,000, electronics-heavy home offices, designer furniture, art — that would get severely haircut by depreciation on an HO-3 claim.
Every standard HO-3 and HO-5 policy EXCLUDES flood, earthquake, sinkhole (in most states), mold beyond sudden-event scope, termite and pest damage, normal wear and tear, neglect and deferred maintenance, acts of war, nuclear incidents, and intentional damage. Flood coverage is never bundled: it requires a separate NFIP (National Flood Insurance Program) policy at $400–$1,800/yr typical, or a private flood carrier like Neptune at $600–$3,000/yr depending on risk zone. Earthquake is a separate endorsement or standalone policy — practically mandatory in California for mortgaged properties, widely required in Washington and Oregon, and relevant anywhere near the New Madrid or Wasatch fault zones. Starting January 1, 2026, Nevada insurers are legally permitted to exclude wildfire from standard homeowners policies and sell wildfire as a standalone product. California, Oregon, and Washington are watching closely; a similar regulatory trend is likely to spread through Western wildfire states over the next 2–5 years.
Sinkhole coverage is a separate rider in Florida, Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky, and Texas. Mold is covered ONLY if tied to a sudden and accidental covered peril (a pipe burst qualifies; long-term leak from deferred maintenance does not). Termite, carpenter ant, and rodent damage is never covered. Wear and tear, cosmetic age damage, and foundation settling are never covered. Pool and restricted-breed-dog incidents may be excluded unless explicitly disclosed at binding. Always read the actual policy PDF, not the quote-page summary — exclusions and sub-limits are where carriers compete, and the ones that look identical at $2,400/yr vs $2,600/yr frequently differ by tens of thousands in claim outcomes. Use the closing cost calculator to budget for flood and earthquake separately if your property is in a mapped risk zone — lenders usually require them at close.
HO-3 (standard): open perils on dwelling, named perils + ACV on contents
HO-5 (upgraded): open perils on BOTH + replacement cost on contents, +5–20%
Earthquake: CA practically mandatory; WA/OR strongly advised
Wildfire exclusion trend: Nevada live Jan 1 2026; CA/OR/WA watching
Sinkhole rider: FL / TN / AL / KY / TX add-on
Mold: only if tied to sudden covered peril
NEVER covered: termite, carpenter ant, rodent, wear-and-tear, foundation settling
5
The Six-Step Homeowners Insurance Buying Process
Homeowners insurance is a repeat-shop market — every renewal is an opportunity to re-quote. Carriers compete aggressively for new business and rely on inertia for renewals, so the same policyholder can be quoted 20–40% differently by three brokers on a single shopping day. In high-catastrophe markets (Florida, California, Texas, Louisiana) the spread is routinely 30–50% because admitted carriers are selectively non-renewing and repricing, while surplus-lines carriers are writing freely at higher rates. The six-step process below cuts typical first-quote pricing 15–30% and avoids the three biggest underwriting traps: under-insurance (coinsurance pro-rata), non-disclosed liability factors (pool, dog breed), and blind acceptance of wind/hurricane deductible structures.
Step 1 is calculating actual dwelling coverage from square footage × local rebuild cost per sqft — never market value. Step 2 is deciding deductibles: $1,000 AOP (all-other-perils) is the national default, $2,500 is the savings sweet spot on larger-dollar homes, and wind/hurricane deductibles in coastal markets should be chosen explicitly rather than accepted as default. Step 3 is choosing HO-3 (standard) vs HO-5 (upgraded — worth it if contents exceed $100,000 at replacement cost). Step 4 is requesting three quotes on IDENTICAL coverage: Policygenius (broker aggregator), Matic or Hippo (direct-to-consumer digital-first), and one independent local agent familiar with your ZIP. Step 5 is reading the actual policy PDF — not the quote summary — to verify dwelling limit, AOP deductible, wind deductible structure, coverage for water backup and service-line breaks, liability limit, and exclusion schedule. Step 6 is disclosing everything: pool, trampoline, dog breed, business-from-home, short-term rental activity, recent claims on prior properties. Non-disclosure is the fastest way to a denied claim. Factor this cost line into a full homeownership budget with the rent vs buy calculator so you can see insurance's real share of true cost of ownership.
Annual rate increases are the other line every buyer under-estimates. Through 2026, admitted-carrier renewals are running 10–15% year-over-year nationally, 15–25% in Florida and California, and 20–30% in coastal Louisiana and West Texas. When a renewal quote exceeds last year by more than 12–15% with no claims filed, shop immediately — many homeowners who have been with the same carrier for 5+ years are anchored to rates that no longer reflect market pricing. Switching carriers after 3–5 renewals commonly saves 15–25%. Request quotes on equal coverage across three brokers before each renewal, and request a wind-mitigation inspection form (Florida, coastal Texas, Louisiana, Alabama) every 3–5 years to capture any new credits from storm-resistance upgrades. Bundling with auto through the same carrier usually earns a 5–15% multi-line discount but can trap a homeowner in a sub-optimal renewal cycle — re-test the bundle every 2–3 years against standalone home + auto to be sure the discount still outweighs the individual policy comparisons.
If a carrier declines to renew after a catastrophe loss season (common in Florida, California, Louisiana), do NOT accept an FAIR Plan / state-insurer-of-last-resort policy without shopping surplus-lines brokers first. Non-admitted surplus carriers routinely write comprehensive coverage at 10–30% above admitted pricing — still cheaper and broader than an FAIR Plan dwelling-only policy with required wraparound for contents and liability.
Shop 3 quotes every 2–3 years — spread is routinely 20–40% on identical coverage
Recalculate dwelling coverage every 2–3 years against current build cost
Request wind-mitigation inspection in FL / TX / LA / AL — 10–40% savings
Disclose everything: pool, trampoline, dog breed, home business, prior claims
Read the actual policy PDF, not the quote summary — exclusions matter
Bundle with auto for 5–15% multi-line discount, but re-test every 2–3 years
1
Calculate dwelling coverage from rebuild cost
Square footage × local cost per sqft. 2026 typical $150–$300/sqft. Never use market value or purchase price. Avoid 80% coinsurance trap by over-shooting slightly or adding extended replacement cost rider.
2
Choose deductibles explicitly
$1,000 AOP is US standard; $2,500 saves 10–15% on larger homes. In FL/TX/LA coastal markets, wind / hurricane deductible is a separate % of dwelling and often mandatory — know what percentage you are accepting.
3
Pick HO-3 or HO-5 policy form
HO-3 is standard and fits most households. HO-5 costs 5–20% more but pays replacement cost on contents — worth it if personal property exceeds $100K or you own significant jewelry, electronics, or art.
4
Request 3 quotes on IDENTICAL coverage
Policygenius (broker aggregator), Matic or Hippo (digital-first direct), one independent local agent. Same dwelling limit, same deductibles, same liability limit, same endorsements. 20–40% spread is routine.
5
Read the actual policy PDF before binding
Verify exclusions (flood, earthquake, wildfire riders), wind deductible structure, water backup and service-line endorsements, Coverage B/C/D/E sublimits, liability cap, and any scheduled personal property riders.
6
Disclose everything and bind
Pool, trampoline, dog breed, home-based business, short-term rental, recent prior-property claims. Non-disclosure voids the policy. Lock effective date to mortgage close or current renewal.
This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered professional financial, medical, legal, or other advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making important decisions. UseCalcPro is not responsible for any actions taken based on calculator results.