California Won't Let Homeowners Insurance Companies Raise Rates, so They're Leaving the State Instead
Giving the state control over insurance rates turned pricing into a Byzantine regulatory process.

Reading insurance trade magazines isn't everyone's idea of a great time, but every Californian should pay attention to the latest news in that arcane world. "State Farm to pull out of 72,000 California insurance policies," blared a Reinsurance News headline. State Farm provides nearly 21 percent of state homeowner policies, so this is big news. Last year, it stopped writing new homeowner policies. Now it's "non-renewing" existing ones and getting out of apartment policies entirely.
Stories about the state's crisis du jour have seeped into the mainstream media too. "The ongoing home insurance crisis in California is about to deepen as yet another company has announced its withdrawal from the state over profitability concerns," explained Newsweek earlier this month, reporting on the exit of Texas-based American National.
However, the California Department of Insurance website's top item boasts that Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara "protects policy holders affected by wildfires from non-renewals." How's that working out for us? The state's insurance problems have plagued wildfire-adjacent homeowners for a few years, but it's rapidly spreading to homeowners in non-wildfire-adjacent areas. The state's "protections" are window dressing.
I don't live anywhere near a forest, yet my latest renewal showed a near-doubling of rates. After talking to my insurance agent, I decided to just pay the higher premium and be thankful I received a renewal. Increasing numbers of Californians must now rely on the so-called FAIR Plan (Fair Access to Insurance Requirements), the state-created, industry-funded insurer of last resort—one that provides only barebones coverage.
The burdens on the FAIR Plan have become so severe—it has three times more insureds than it was designed to cover—that there's open talk about what happens if it fails. Insurance may be boring, but it's a necessity for just about everyone. Without a functioning insurance market, California's economy is in peril. Yet the state's response has been as useful as its response to most other crises.
Instead of focusing on critical insurance, Gov. Gavin Newsom has invested his political energy into securing passage of a $6.4-billion mental-health measure (Proposition 1) and burnishing his reputation on the national stage. Lara announced some reforms, but they are just proposals (and one imposes new burdens on insurers)—and they avoid the root of the insurance problem including the bureaucratic hurdles that distort the marketplace and reduce competition. They won't do what's necessary—speeding up the rate-review process.
The state's leaders are acting like this is some unexpected perfect storm, but it's one that's been on the horizon for several years. "California's one-two punch—forcing companies to write risky policies while also limiting their ability to charge market rates—would leave insurers with little choice but stop writing new policies," I wrote in 2021. Last March, I warned insurance companies are "quietly fleeing" the state. Two months later, they stopped being quiet about it. In May, State Farm announced its freeze on writing new homeowner policies.
Last September, CalMatters reported on the state reaction. Legislators, ever concerned about criticisms from consumer groups, attorneys, and the anti-business crowd, failed to pass a rescue plan. But Lara announced a reform that makes it easier for insurers to increase rates to meet market conditions in exchange for offering policies in wildfire areas but never implemented anything. "Can this plan fix California's insurance crisis?" the headline asked. I think we know the answer.
In its latest rate filing available on the Department of Insurance website, State Farm General Insurance Co. (the insurer's California homeowners' company) explained that, despite being granted a recent rate hike, its surplus is low—leaving an unacceptable level of exposure. Obviously, insurance companies are in the business of writing insurance policies, but they can't entertain a level of risk that could obliterate their ability to pay out claims. They can't put the business at risk of insolvency.
Basically, state regulations haven't enabled insurers to adjust pricing to reflect inflation and market conditions over time. Sure they obviously get occasional rate bumps as we now see, but state control has turned pricing into a Byzantine regulatory process rather than a simple business decision. The problem is tied to Proposition 103, the 1988 ballot measure that gave the insurance commissioner the power to approve and roll back rates.
Elected commissioners have little incentive to approve rate hikes. Consumer groups are paid essentially to oppose rate hikes, which creates a long, complex, and antagonistic process. In most industries, companies set prices as they see fit and competition tempers the prices. Imagine if in your field you had to petition the government every time you want to adjust prices.
Even with Prop. 103, the state can enact reforms that will help the market function at a tolerable level. State Farm argued its capital depletion "is an alarm signaling the grave need for rapid and transformational action, including the critical need for rapid review and approval of currently pending and future rate filings." Will Lara and Newsom listen? They haven't after years of dire warnings, so temper your expectations.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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Newsome is almighty government. He'll just pass a law forcing the insurance companies into staying in the state, taking losses on claims, and forcing rate spikes in other states to cover the losses.
California democrats are fuckin' heroes.
See my comment below. He may actually be able to do that because of a bad federal law.
See my comment below yours, no he can't force a company to do business in his state. He could threaten them that if they don't insure everyone then they will be barred from doing business with the State but he can not stop them from doing so with individuals.
It's the voters. The referendum system allows insurance rates to be on the fucking ballot. So as much as I hate the Democrat Party, it's the voters who are at fault. All this shit started back in the 80s.
No, it's government. It's always the mere existence of government, coercive monopolistic immortal government, whose burrocrats have no incentive to retrench and every incentive to expand. The more government intrudes into people's lives, the more the public responds to the incentive by siccing government on everyone else.
The democrat party is a gestalt of its members.
Sarc is going to think “Gestalt” refers to some sandwich he knows nothing about.
I suspect California can only prevent companies with a headquarters in California from leaving the state. Which I suspect will lead to any with headquarters in California moving said headquarters to Texas.
Some years back, Pacific Life re-domesticated to Nebraska. That photo of a surfacing humpback whale ought to be of a leaping catfish.
Californians are getting the government that they deserve.
And the same is true for Florida, which has had this problem for years.
Florida is hurricane zone.
If they have CA style regulatory scheme on insurance, I'm Desatis would be receptive to change. No such hope remains for CA.
Florida's answer has been to let insurance companies do what they want and force people rebuilding homes/buildings to have sturdier designs that can handle hurricanes. That's better than Cali expecting insurance companies to subsidize people who can't afford insurance. The best solution would be to allow companies to come and go as they choose, but that's not going to happen because Floridians aren't libertarians. I guess the insurance companies in Cali will simply have to shard off their interests there as a separate company and let it go bankrupt to get out of the market.
Right. It's better to bite the bullet with some people suffering from the change of no longer getting subsidized insurance and paying more for it (so insurers can stay in business).
It means a lot of property in low lying zones will find living there very expensive due to the costs of paying for insurance that will rebuild your home every 15 years or so. Or, people will find a use that isn't so costly when a hurricane comes (like a coconut grove, but I'm sure they'll come up with good ideas) for low lying areas in hurricane zones.
All of the Floridians I know really love their style of government presently. They were openly bragging about it during the pandemic lockdowns.
Californians are getting government good and hard.
It’s happening with auto insurance too. Just were told our policy won’t be renewed by LiMu, we’ve never filed a claim in 20 years of living in CA.
https://www.ktvu.com/news/auto-insurers-reportedly-limiting-new-policies-in-california-as-drivers-face-challenges-getting-coverage
States have absolute power over the insurance industry. After a Supreme Court ruling that ruled that insurance was interstate commerce (duh -- most insurance companies write policies across state lines!) and subject to federal regulation, the 1945 McCarran-Ferguson Act totally delegated regulation to the states and forbade the federal government from interfering in any way. The insurance lobby fought very hard for this and now they are suffering the consequences. I shed no tears for them. Unfortunately, the consumer is suffering as the result of the greed. Florida and California are two of the three largest US states and the states' incompetence has created a catastrophe.
Repeal the McCarran-Ferguson Act and enact reasonable regulation at the federal level. The SC was right.
I wish I believed that last part was a possibility. But I think the likelihood of Federal legislation being 'reasonable is slim to none, and Slim went home.
"Reasonable regulation at the federal level"?
That is some impressive naivete.
FL governance has been rock-solid. CA is a glorified shit-show.
Especially since Florida did away with squatters ‘rights’.
It’s always about “greed”.
Greed is good. Greedy is what drives us to achieve. Without greed we'd still be squating in caves afraid of the thunder gods.
Not in Florida. Your squattin' ass would be out in the swamp with the gators and pythons.
"...Unfortunately, the consumer is suffering as the result of the greed..."
The tell of a steaming pile of lefty shit: "GREED!"
Stuff it up your ass; 'greed' is nothing other than the expectation of making a profit for the capital expended, and steaming piles of jealous shit like you resent that.
Or let it play out.
Better we do away with the democrat party and return to McCarthysim. The real kind. Not the fictional boogeyman version invented by the left.
I don't understand your comment. If Insurance is "interstate commerce" then the states have no power to regulate it, that would leave it entirely to the federal government. Even if they did have that power they can not force a company to operate in their state. That would be silly.
This entire debacle is man made. The wildfire problem is the result of decades of poor fire management driven by environmental groups, expansion into wildfire zones and uncontrolled regulations. Let people who build in risky locations pay higher rates and leave the rest of us alone.
Every state has something like an insurance board. They are the ones who decide which insurance companies, be they home, health, auto or life, are allowed to operate in their state. They have powers to negotiate rates and deny companies access to their state. On that way you don't get too much competition and some politicians idiot kid gets a job and some nice bribes.
Win win. For everyone except the consumer.
Not exactly. State Insurance Boards don't decide who can operate in a state, they regulate how a company in the state operates making sure for example that they have enough reserves to cover policies, rates are not jacked into the stratosphere without public comment first etc. This is far different than saying who can or can not operate. If a company can follow the rules, they can operate. The Insurance Board has no power to ban a company who follows all the rules and is not engaged in unlawful behavior from operating.
Repeal the McCarran-Ferguson Act and enact reasonable regulation at the federal level.
Yes, I'm sure 'reasonable regulation at the federal level' will do to the cost of home insurance what Obamacare did to the cost of health insurance.
Maybe people shouldn't live where their home is likely to be wiped out by an earthquake.
Charlie capsized to port years ago, and his brains leaked out his ear.
People should live where they want, but accept the risk of living there. Who are you to tell them where they "shouldn't" live. The question here is insurability, if the risk is too high the insurance company should be able to leave that area because they're a business and not a charity.
And if insurance is not affordable in that area, the consumer has to find an area affordable to him.
Fifty monkeys or one gorilla? Most companies will choose the former.
I suspect they are pulling out over coverage of million dollar SUVs against being consumed in forest fires. Somebody with more money than sense living in the forest in a McMansion with few tricked out Mercedes Benz SUVs would really kill the bottom line.
Just have The State provide insurance for everyone. Problem solved.
Until they implement the equity reimbursement rules.
They’re likely going in that direction. It’s only a matter of time someone like AOC becomes governor of the state. Once the amnesty is granted to the millions of migrants (literally from in socialist countries) the radicals will take over the dem party. And right now Nancy Pelosi passes as semi moderate in that party.
In about 5-10 years, all those kids shut out of schools during pandemic will near working age. The country imported millions of “asylum seeker” – enough to probably fill a medium sized city. All this just when AI is set to take over the job market. I don’t think American realize just how much trouble their nation is in.
Where's Reason.com's token "Socia1ist" to defend his state by pointing to its wonderful $1,000-per-plate restaurants?
Which socialist? There are many.
I for one am shocked to hear that California is doing something economically foolish.
Fascist gonna fascist.
With that said.... with the amount of money insurance companies have to burn on stadium naming rights and advertising, (selling a product that's literally illegal not to purchase) they can't be doing that badly.
"Homeowners, CMP, Other – The net written premium for the remainder of the State Farm P-C business represented 35 percent of the P-C companies’ combined net written premium. Earned premium was $30.5 billion. Incurred claims and loss adjustment expenses were $28.0 billion and all other underwriting expenses totaled $7.1 billion. The underwriting loss was $4.7 billion."
https://newsroom.statefarm.com/2023-financial-results/
Looks like ‘Jake’ might be getting downsized soon.
The only difference between the cesspools of New York and California is the latter has much better weather.
The main law that need to be passed, is that any insurance company that leaves the state, MUST take all underwriting with it. This would mean marine, inland marine, homeowners, automobile, business policies, umbrella policies, MEDICAL PLANS, Dental plans, virtually any kind of insurance that they sell they must leave behind.
PLUS any other insurance company that they own more then 3% of needs to leave as well. And any company that owns more than 3% of that company has to leave as well.
The INSURANCE companies have the right to SUE IN FEDERAL COURT and to obey the law until then. They can also tell their insureds that the price is actually XXX but the government is unlawfully making them reduce that to YYY. Tell them that WHEN THEY WIN THE SUIT IN FEDERAL COURT, the bill will become due for the balance and the mortgage holders will be notified of a deficit in insurance payment if not paid.
This would mean that banks WILL foreclose on every home where insurance is not brought up to date when insurance companies win in federal court.
The issue, INSURANCE is in fact a science of actuarial. It looks at virtually every possible claim as a probability, then determines a break even point and a profit point based on that mathematical formula. Insurance can NOT operate based on government telling it to only charge half of the known actuarial. So government has to change the actuarial (homeowner insurance is not liable for forest fires as an example), then the rates will drop.
Government interference. Let the insurance companies cover who they like. Let the market decide. If you live in a flood plain and can't afford the insurance then suck it up and move. That's SO simple I don't know why liberals can't handle common sense like that. The market will take care of it if you let it. If you want to build your house in dense woodlands with decades of built up underbrush then go ahead and do it, but companies don't owe you "insurability". Live with your choices. There's no reason to punish insurance companies unless they aren't living up to their contracts
"The main law that need to be passed, is that any insurance company that leaves the state, MUST take all underwriting with it. This would mean marine, inland marine, homeowners, automobile, business policies, umbrella policies, MEDICAL PLANS, Dental plans, virtually any kind of insurance that they sell they must leave behind..."
Planned economies DO NOT WORK!
Read the comments and weep. You're all socialists now.
Well, the Conservative Christians have always been fans of big government power forcing people and companies. They've just got different goals for big government than the left.
Any time the government (or the people through referenda) involves themselves in private business, they will make things worse. Passing a law does not revoke the law of supply and demand (such as with the fast food minimum wage) or enhance the benefits of competition. If it were that easy, the California legislature could pass a law outlawing the Second Law of Thermodynamics, and solve the climate/energy crisis in one fell swoop.
So in this whole story, did anybody ask *why* they want raise the prices ? Has there been a rash of natural disasters ? Or is this just corporate greed to squeeze homeowners for cash ?
Th3y want to raise rates because they haven’t been able to raise them in the past fast enough to cover costs. Two interfering trends here.
First, to the insurance companies are rising. Most everything in CA is getting more expensive, faster than in much of the country. Part of it is stupid progressive policies and laws throughout the state that generally drive up costs of doing business in the state. They have some of the most expensive gas and diesel prices in the country, due to a number of factors, including requirements that essentially require CA specific refineries. Wages are higher because other costs are higher, and most recently, an excessively high minimum wage. Then there are the rising insurance specific costs. For example, wildfire have exploded in cost, damage, and frequency over the last decade. Utility companies haven’t been allowed to recapture the cost of protecting their infrastructure through preventive maintenance, so it hasn’t been done. The sort of power line right of way maintenance that saved our town in MT a couple years ago, don’t work in CA, because they are now overgrown. They have similar problems with mudslides and flooding. Instead of building more flood control dams, they are breaching the ones they have to protect marginal subspecies that no one has heard of. Starting in 2020, violence hasn’t been punished, which means that liability costs for property owners are skyrocketing. Every broken window or shoplifted building, or now building with squatters, costs insurance companies money. If squatters or homeless set fires to stay warm, and they burn down, the insurance companies pay. Same with the fires set by AntiFA and BLM. Etc.
Meanwhile, the insurance commission tries to keep insurance costs from rising too quickly. No doubt, there are probably agencies and lawsuits trying to impose DEI mandates on insurance. There are proposals to make insurance costs dependent on income. The state pool for those who can’t find insurance passes the costs on to the remaining insurance companies who fund it,
If you graph y the two trends - the rising costs of insurance payouts and of insurance premiums, the former is rising faster, and including other costs now exceeds it. Insurance is a numbers game, and so, one should expect that insurance companies see this trend more sharply than the people, as well as the politicians who represent them.
"...Or is this just corporate greed to squeeze homeowners for cash?..."
When, exactly, does "profit" become "greed"?
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/cSUE5snyQm0
Are you increasing price because your cost to deliver a service / product increased ? Or are you increasing price because you want more money ? Intent is everything.
No, liberty is everything. Intent is none of your business. You want insurance, they want to sell you insurance. You are free to agree on a price or get it elsewhere. You can demand less, they can demand more, infinitely, for any intent you or they feel like. Intent is nothing.
Because they're losing billions of dollars per year operating there.
have you been watching the news the past 10 years? Cali has had natural disasters for years now, wild fires, LOTS of flooding. Lots of snowcap melt flooding too. Florida is getting some of the same with hurricanes and flooding. However, there they let the natural market forces handle. Some people are just going without insurance for example. You can't do that if you owe on your house though, so they wind up selling and moving away.
Natural disasters aren't increasing but costs to recover from them are, thanks to myriad factors, not the smallest of which is California's own market meddling resulting in some of the highest construction costs in the nation.
Insurance may be boring, but it's a necessity for just about everyone. Without a functioning insurance market, California's economy is in peril.
No, without a functioning insurance market, California's insureds are in peril. And, frankly, they deserve to be. In fact, all of America deserves it.
Because America does not understand what insurance IS or how/why it works.
The people's understanding of health insurance is the worst. The ignorance on that is staggering. Quick show of hands - who thinks health insurance should cover pre-existing conditions?
If you raised your hand, please do the country a favor: stick a loaded gun in your mouth and pull the trigger. You are a major part of the problem. Of those surviving, who thinks health insurance should cover routine care? If you raised your hand, please do the country a favor: stick a loaded gun in your mouth and pull the trigger. You are a major part of the problem.
Auto is a distant second (but closing, thanks to the market being flooded with premature EV tech) and home is picking up pace in third what with the housing market in the state it's in.
California (in fact, pretty much the entire west coast) is seeing insurance companies abandon it because their government is demanding wholly unreasonable coverage for wholly unreasonable policy costs. Insurance is all about risk management. And when the State sticks a thumb on the scale of what risks to assume (which incidentally, like a minimum wage, causes the cost of treatment to increase - because, why the hell not, "they can afford it") and forces way too much risk on the insurer - such that they'll be guaranteed losses unless they raise policy rates to levels that negate the point of paying one - there's no point in the insurer sticking around.
America's biggest problem is that they don't want to hear the words: "You are uninsurable." When the reality is, that's true for a LOT of people. But since insurers are increasingly forbidden from saying that, by law - they do the next best thing: "we won't offer coverage in your state (because the majority of it is now uninsurable)".
Insurance worked just fine for a very long time, until entitlement mentality took over and everyone forgot HOW it worked and why. I don't blame insurers for bailing even slightly. If I were asked to provide advice for them, that's PRECISELY what I'd tell them to do.
Yes. Americans don't see medical insurance as a way for them to pay for their medical care. They see it as a way to make SOMEONE ELSE pay for their medical care.
"...Quick show of hands – who thinks health insurance should cover pre-existing conditions?..."
People who approve of that aren't going to be "quick" at much of anything.
You had me until you recommended suicide. Dick move.
That's an odd take.
The sad thing is when the bill comes due at FAIR and they start collapsing the Feds will just come in and bail them out so they are not worried at all. In essence the rest of the country is just subsidizing California socialists by paying full price...same with all insurance these days.
that's what happens when you can't make a profit. What companies are going to subsidize insurance for a bunch of whiny Californians lmao