BMW Garage | BMW Meets | Register | Today's Posts | Search |
10-07-2024, 06:34 PM | #1 |
Lieutenant Colonel
2417
Rep 1,620
Posts |
Florida residents How do you afford insurance?
Every other storm it seems insurance companies stop covering residents and paying claims yet they raise everyone elses rates nationwide to cover their costs.
At what point is Florida uninhabitable? I feel bad for folks that can't just pick up and move. |
10-07-2024, 06:52 PM | #2 |
Captain
2051
Rep 652
Posts |
Good question, we moved my mom off the Texas Gulf Coast largely due to homeowners insurance increases. Wind, flood and fire were three different policies and the totals were nearing her mortgage payments.
__________________
|
Appreciate
0
|
10-07-2024, 07:12 PM | #3 |
Brigadier General
9524
Rep 4,130
Posts |
Go ask folks in CA about earthquake or fire coverage. State Farm is threatening to leave CA altogether, it’s not just a Florida issue.
__________________
2021 X3 M40i
1974 2002tii, Inka, 5 sp manual BMWCCA # 327475 |
Appreciate
5
|
10-07-2024, 07:52 PM | #4 |
Private First Class
174
Rep 195
Posts
Drives: '25 M240xi
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: United States
|
"We can't profit off you anymore so get bent, we out" - the cartel
__________________
2025 M240i Xdrive TNM/Cog - On Order
|
Appreciate
5
|
10-07-2024, 10:00 PM | #5 |
Brigadier General
11823
Rep 4,872
Posts |
We don’t pay state income taxes, so that helps. I pay about $6K/year for insurance with 2% deductible and expect I’d pay more than that in state income tax if we had one.
Also, our property value assessment increases are capped for primary residences. I pay about $6K for property taxes in our home we’ve been in since 2002 and that is well under 1% of property fair value.
__________________
Current: 2018 SO/SS F83 ZCP
Gone: 2015 SO/SO F82 |
Appreciate
3
|
10-07-2024, 11:13 PM | #6 |
First Lieutenant
3207
Rep 320
Posts |
Ask this question again once their renewals come up. In LA, we had Laura, Delta, Zeta & Ida. All within about a year. Prior to this my homeowners was around $3200 and flood around $900. In 2022, my insurance was around $5500/year. UPC went bankrupt at the end of the year which was after all the other companies had pulled out. Result, force placed with Citizens at around $9k/year. Was able to maneuver to get it around $7500/year. This is NOT including flood which is around $1200 or property taxes. A few companies came in and we are back down to around $5400.
Currently, people are trying to buy homes and the note they can afford. Once insurance gets factored in people are walking away from the deals. The next issue, is getting insurers to pay. We know people who are fighting insurance and don’t have complete repairs from Ida 8/2021. Attorneys have had to get involved and don’t even get me started on that. We will never file a claim again unless we have significant damage. It isn’t worth it and they nail your ass on the back end. |
Appreciate
0
|
10-08-2024, 08:52 AM | #7 |
Captain
3876
Rep 1,003
Posts |
There’s an old saying: Insurance companies are in the business of getting paid for risks they don’t take.
Details in insurance contracts matter, a lot. |
Appreciate
6
kscarrol9524.00 DrVenture1219.00 vreihen1620342.50 RickFLM411822.50 Murf the Surf21071.50 B58-M340iX247.00 |
10-08-2024, 09:42 AM | #8 | |
Colonel
1755
Rep 2,835
Posts |
Quote:
For those not saying its only a FL problem and point out CA, there are huge areas of the country that don't have anything close to what the worst states deal with. With the FEMA budget (Federal program) at $20 billion and likely to get huge extra funding, states that continue to use the bulk of it should be paying the bulk of it. If states regularly need federal money people outside the state should have a say in what is going on. I'm fine with you building a house on the beach but don't want to fund replacement it if it continues to get knocked down.
__________________
2006 Z4M Coupe - ZHP knob, stubby antenna, clutch delay delete
|
|
Appreciate
5
|
10-08-2024, 10:26 AM | #9 |
First Lieutenant
1219
Rep 374
Posts |
All these disasters may be taking their toll. Florida having no state tax and lower property taxes certainly does offset some of the extraordinary expenses. But you have to add back property insurance, flood insurance, auto insurance, pest control, much higher food costs, being 38th in the U.S. for wages, etc.
We sold the MIL's house in Punta Gorda in mid 2023. The current price on Zillow is down 10% from that sales price, which was 10% down from the 2022 peak price. From a newsletter that I read: "Milton and Helene are compounding another problem: People aren’t migrating to Florida like they used to. With Tampa’s housing supply up 58% and demand down 10% in August, half of the area’s for-sale listings had gotten price cuts as of a month ago, according to the analytics firm Parcl Labs. Zoom in: One homeowner told the Wall Street Journal he’s been trying to sell his ~$580,000 suburban Tampa house for eight months, but he hasn’t even received open house visitors. Zoom out: Prospective buyers are getting priced out. Home and flood insurance rates in Florida have skyrocketed as much as 400% over the past five years, and those premiums will likely only get worse after this year’s hurricane season. Disaster models are projecting an average of $35 billion in damages from Hurricane Milton" There is an also expense to having to leave your home frequently, toss your food, travel/lodging, and clean up, an $8K hurricane deductible, paying to have shutters installed. I am not dunking on Florida, but I do think that all factors need to be considered in a true cost analysis. And I think it is beginning to hurt certain locales. CA, TX and FL have the highest insurance claims nationwide. It does seem unsustainable.
__________________
Carbon Black - Debadged|Mocha Nappa|DHP|DAP|Premium Pkg|Luxury Seating|M668 w/ DSW06+
|
Appreciate
3
|
10-08-2024, 11:47 AM | #10 | ||
Brigadier General
11823
Rep 4,872
Posts |
Quote:
Quote:
There is an issue with property insurance in FL with respect to risk. The state of FL is very large and risk is not the same everywhere. The risk of significant hurricane damage or flooding where I live is low relative to other parts of the state, but those risks increase exponentially as you get close to the coast. The insurance rates are higher near the coast (and generally need to be obtained through Citizens as insurer of last resort), but IMO they do not adequately reflect the exponential risk of loss from living on the coast where property values are also much higher. Additionally, we (in FL) are all on the hook for an assessment if Citizens needs more money to pay claims. So we are effectively reinsuring the risk of losses to houses on the coast. As I stated above, I am ok with what I pay. It will go up next year. It isn't going to be fixed by just complaining about it. There needs to be some reform to reduce fraudulent claims and more fairly distribute the cost of risk. I suspect the same is true in other places and it is spreading as insurers will use any reason to raise rates wherever they can.
__________________
Current: 2018 SO/SS F83 ZCP
Gone: 2015 SO/SO F82 |
||
10-08-2024, 12:38 PM | #11 |
Private First Class
174
Rep 195
Posts
Drives: '25 M240xi
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: United States
|
If anyone cares to learn about the FL insurance crisis (and by extension our national insurance crisis), this video is quite informative. It's not just "going up like normal" and the way this year is shaping up so far the industry could implode in short order.
Need not criticize the political lean of the source, its a pretty matter of fact piece.
__________________
2025 M240i Xdrive TNM/Cog - On Order
|
Appreciate
0
|
10-08-2024, 01:38 PM | #12 | |||
Colonel
1755
Rep 2,835
Posts |
Quote:
Maybe if a huge amount government aid is going to an area & residents had to pay they would think twice about living there. FL is one of the fastest growing states in the country (known for low taxes) & disasters are only going to involve more people. It's Florida's choice to load the coasts with people & buildings, as long as I am not paying for it I am fine with it. I agree on eliminating insurance fraud, problem with this is people are completely against it until they think they can take advantage of their situation. As for "fairly distributing the cost of risk", doesn't the State of FL set rates, then companies either comply or leave? Companies leave, less competition, government sets up Citizens to help pay so in affect you end up with government insurance? I don't see this system ever creating fair rates & if a person doesn't have to bear the actual cost of insurance they don't care nearly as much. Florida's insurance system seems to be the opposite fair distribution of costs and very socialist. Quote:
Quote:
__________________
2006 Z4M Coupe - ZHP knob, stubby antenna, clutch delay delete
Last edited by David70; 10-08-2024 at 01:50 PM.. |
|||
Appreciate
0
|
10-08-2024, 02:19 PM | #13 | |
Brigadier General
11823
Rep 4,872
Posts |
Quote:
Citizens' premiums are effectively controlled by the state legislature and most are actually too low IMO. Other insurers set their rates and the state must approve them, like (I believe) everywhere else. The current system is the product of "something must be done" and while true something needs to be done to make insurance available, premiums should reflect the risk to the insured and thus is concurrently both part of the solution and part of the problem. Fraud remains a huge problem and I've had contractors bold enough to call me or knock on my door and tell me they can get me a free roof. But as someone (maybe a dummy) who has adequate insurance, pays their premiums, paid just under $50K for my own roof, paid for my own impact-resistant glass and lives inland, I don't want to subsidize anyone with more money in a multi-million dollar property on the coast in FL or anywhere else, any more than you want to fund people in other states. So this is in addition to the FEMA funding issue in my book.
__________________
Current: 2018 SO/SS F83 ZCP
Gone: 2015 SO/SO F82 |
|
Appreciate
0
|
10-08-2024, 02:33 PM | #14 | |||
Colonel
1755
Rep 2,835
Posts |
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
__________________
2006 Z4M Coupe - ZHP knob, stubby antenna, clutch delay delete
Last edited by David70; 10-08-2024 at 02:41 PM.. |
|||
Appreciate
0
|
10-08-2024, 02:57 PM | #15 | |
Brigadier General
11823
Rep 4,872
Posts |
Quote:
As for other insurers, FL does not set the rates for them. It exercises regulatory oversight / approval to ensure compliance with actuarial standards and statutory provisions, similar to other states like Ohio.
__________________
Current: 2018 SO/SS F83 ZCP
Gone: 2015 SO/SO F82 |
|
Appreciate
1
2000cs3876.00 |
10-08-2024, 05:30 PM | #16 | |
Colonel
5925
Rep 2,011
Posts |
Quote:
Also if your home is paid off you could take the chance and not have insurance, or at least not the hurricane portion which is the most expensive. I know some people who do this. Just have regular insurance for like liability, fire etc and a flood policy. I was without insurance for a while when they tried to change mine from around $3500 to over $7k. I did finally find some for around $4k and that’s what I’ve had up to now. |
|
Appreciate
0
|
10-08-2024, 06:10 PM | #17 | ||
Colonel
1755
Rep 2,835
Posts |
Quote:
Seems like the "don't want to write policies in some areas" is at least partly caused by the rate increases capped and at 1.2 million homes with citizens (roughly 15% in FL) I would expect at some higher rate the 1.2 million would go down. Quote:
__________________
2006 Z4M Coupe - ZHP knob, stubby antenna, clutch delay delete
|
||
Appreciate
0
|
10-09-2024, 09:28 PM | #18 |
Colonel
2263
Rep 2,799
Posts |
It’s become apparent that insurance is mostly a fucking racket…..with 99 percent of people paying premiums for losses they will never experience.
So yeah, I don’t feel sorry for insurance companies.
__________________
2025 X7 40i, 2024 I7 60i, 2022 M8 Comp GC, 2021 AMG GT53, 2022 X5M Competition, 2021 X7 40i, 2019 M5, 2018 M550I, 2017 Audi Q7, 2014 M6 GC, 2013 Mercedes CLS550, 2011 750LI, 2008 M6 Cabrio, 2008 Porsche Cayenne S, 2004 Mercedes SL55 AMG, 2003 Mercedes SL500, 2000 Mercedes CL500, 1993 Lexus SC400, 1989 525i, 1985 318i
Last edited by mjr24; 10-09-2024 at 09:29 PM.. |
Appreciate
0
|
Post Reply |
Bookmarks |
|
|